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Featured researches published by James Kijas.


Mammalian Genome | 2002

A large duplication associated with dominant white color in pigs originated by homologous recombination between LINE elements flanking KIT.

Elisabetta Giuffra; Anna Törnsten; Stefan Marklund; Erik Bongcam-Rudloff; Patrick Chardon; James Kijas; Susan Anderson; Alan Archibald; Leif Andersson

The Dominant White (I/KIT) locus is one of the major coat color loci in the pig. Previous studies showed that the Dominant White (I) and Patch (IP) alleles are both associated with a duplication including the entire KIT coding sequence. We have now constructed a BAC contig spanning the three closely linked tyrosine kinase receptor genes PDGFRA–KIT–KDR. The size of the duplication was estimated at about 450 kb and includes KIT, but not PDGFRA and KDR. Sequence analysis revealed that the duplication arose by unequal homologous recombination between two LINE elements flanking KIT. The same unique duplication breakpoint was identified in animals carrying the I and IP alleles across breeds, implying that Dominant White and Patch alleles are descendants of a single duplication event. An unexpected finding was that Piétrain pigs carry the KIT duplication, since this breed was previously assumed to be wild type at this locus. Comparative sequence analysis indicated that the distinct phenotypic effect of the duplication occurs because the duplicated copy lacks some regulatory elements located more than 150 kb upstream of KIT exon 1 and necessary for normal KIT expression.


Mammalian Genome | 1999

Comparison of horse Chromosome 3 with donkey and human chromosomes by cross-species painting and heterologous FISH mapping

Terje Raudsepp; James Kijas; Sophie Godard; Gérard Guérin; Leif Andersson; B. P. Chowdhary

Abstract. The melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R), mast/stem cell growth factor receptor (KIT), and platelet-derived growth factor receptor α (PDGFRA) are loci that all belong to equine linkage group 2 (LG2). Of these, KIT was fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) mapped to ECA3q21 with equine cDNA and heterologous porcine BAC probes, while MC1R was localized to ECA3p12 and PDGFRA to ECA3q21 with heterologous porcine BAC probes. A three-step comparison between ECA3 and donkey chromosomes was carried out. First, microdissected ECA3 painting probe was used on donkey chromosomes, which showed disruption of the equine synteny. Next, human (HSA) Chromosomes (Chrs) 16q and 4 specific paints, known to be homologous to ECA3p and 3q, respectively, were applied to detect homologous chromosomal segment(s) in donkey. Finally, four genes (MC1R, ALB, PDGFRA, KIT) and two equine microsatellite markers (SGCV18 and SGCV33) located on ECA3 were FISH mapped to donkey chromosomes. The findings refined the cross species painting homology results and added six new markers to the nascent donkey gene map. The hypothesis that Tobiano coat color in horses may be associated with a chromosomal inversion involving genes within LG2 was tested by G-banding-based cytogenetic analysis and ordering of four loci—KIT, PDGFRA, albumin (ALB), and MC1R—in Tobiano and non-tobiano (homozygous as well as heterozygous) horses. However, no difference either in banding patterns or location/relative order of the genes was observed in the three classes. The study highlights successful FISH mapping of BAC probes across evolutionarily diverged species, viz., pig and horse/donkey, and represents the first use of large-sized individual clones across distantly related farm animals.


Genetics Selection Evolution | 2004

Estimating the frequency of Asian cytochrome B haplotypes in standard European and local Spanish pig breeds

Alex Clop; M. Amills; Jose Luis Noguera; Ana I. Fernández; J. Capote; Maria Misericòrdia Ramón; Lucía Kelly; James Kijas; Leif Andersson; Armand Sánchez

Mitochondrial DNA has been widely used to perform phylogenetic studies in different animal species. In pigs, genetic variability at the cytochrome B gene and the D-loop region has been used as a tool to dissect the genetic relationships between different breeds and populations. In this work, we analysed four SNP at the cytochrome B gene to infer the Asian (A1 and A2 haplotypes) or European (E1 and E2 haplotypes) origins of several European standard and local pig breeds. We found a mixture of Asian and European haplotypes in the Canarian Black pig (E1, A1 and A2), German Piétrain (E1, A1 and A2), Belgian Piétrain (E1, A1), Large White (E1 and A1) and Landrace (E1 and A1) breeds. In contrast, the Iberian (Guadyerbas, Ervideira, Caldeira, Campanario, Puebla and Torbiscal strains) and the Majorcan Black pig breeds only displayed the E1 haplotype. Our results show that the introgression of Chinese pig breeds affected most of the major European standard breeds, which harbour Asian haplotypes at diverse frequencies (15–56%). In contrast, isolated local Spanish breeds, such as the Iberian and Majorcan Black pig, only display European cytochrome B haplotypes, a feature that evidences that they were not crossed with other Chinese or European commercial populations. These findings illustrate how geographical confinement spared several local Spanish breeds from the extensive introgression event that took place during the 18th and 19th centuries in Europe.


Animal Biotechnology | 2001

SCREENING AND SCANNING OF SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISMS IN THE PIG MELANOCORTIN 1 RECEPTOR GENE (MC1R) BY PYROSEQUENCING

Anna C. Gustafsson; James Kijas; Anders Alderborn; Mathias Uhlén; Leif Andersson; Joakim Lundeberg

The increasing interest in the discovery and characterization of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) emphasis the need for high-throughput and cost effective scoring methods. Pyrosequencing is a novel method for screening SNPs. In this study we examine breed specific SNPs in the pig melanocortin 1 receptor gene (MC1R), some causing coat color phenotypes. A total of fifteen pigs representing eight breeds and crosses were analyzed by pyrosequencing. In addition to nine previously known SNPs, we also detected one new missense mutation by pyrosequencing. We here show that the SNPs were readily scored using standard reaction conditions. Insertions as well as substitutions were unambiguously detected and all genotypes were resolved in terms of homo- and heterozygozity.


Genetics | 1998

Melanocortin receptor 1 (MC1R) mutations and coat color in pigs.

James Kijas; R. Wales; A. Törnsten; P. Chardon; Maria Moller; Leif C. Andersson


Genome Research | 1998

Molecular basis for the dominant white phenotype in the domestic pig

Stefan Marklund; James Kijas; Heriberto Rodriguez-Martinez; Lars Rönnstrand; Keiko Funa; Maria Moller; Dirk Lange; Inger Edfors-Lilja; Leif Andersson


Genetics | 2001

A frameshift mutation in MC1R and a high frequency of somatic reversions cause black spotting in pigs.

James Kijas; Maria Moller; Graham Plastow; Leif Andersson


Animal Genetics | 2000

Detection of the causal mutation for canine leukocyte adhesion deficiency (CLAD) using pyrosequencing

James Kijas; R. K. Juneja; S. Gäfvert; L. Andersson


Archive | 1998

Methods for analyzing animal products

Leif C. Andersson; James Kijas; Elisabetta Giuffra; Gary Evans; Richard Wales; Graham Plastow


Hereditas | 2004

Microdissection of Pig Chromosomes: Dissection of Whole Chromosomes, Arms and Bands for Construction of Paints and Libraries

R. Chaudhary; James Kijas; Terje Raudsepp; Xin Yuan Guan; Hongen Zhang; B. P. Chowdhary

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Maria Moller

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Anna Törnsten

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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B. P. Chowdhary

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Erik Bongcam-Rudloff

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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