T. G. Berryere
University of Saskatchewan
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Featured researches published by T. G. Berryere.
Mammalian Genome | 2002
S. M. Schmutz; T. G. Berryere; Angela D. Goldfinch
We used PCR amplification of cDNA prepared from skin biopsies to determine the nearly full-length, protein-coding sequence of dog TYRP1, and to define sequence variants potentially responsible for the B locus. One common variant contained a premature stop codon in exon 5 (Q331ter), and the other deleted a proline residue in exon 5 (345delP). A third variant in exon 2 (S41C) occurred less frequently. We genotyped 43 brown (including brown and white) and 34 black (including tricolor, black-and-tan, and black and white) dogs. All 43 of the brown group carried two or more of these sequence variants likely to interfere with TYRP1 function, whereas 0 of 34 in the black group carried two or more of these variants (10 carried one variant). We also genotyped 13 black-nosed and 10 brown-nosed dogs whose coat color was described as red, yellow, gold, apricot, or orange (including various degrees of white). All these dogs were homozygous for a R306X MC1R variant shown to be associated with these coat color phenotypes. The black or brown nose correlated perfectly with the absence or presence of the same three TYRP1 variants described above. TYRP1 was linkage mapped to dog chromosome 11, with a SNP in exon 7.
Mammalian Genome | 2004
S. M. Schmutz; T. G. Berryere; Daniel C. Ciobanu; Alan Mileham; Barbara H. Schmidtz; Merete Fredholm
We used PCR amplification of cDNA prepared from skin biopsies to determine the full-length protein-coding sequence of tyrosinase (TYR) in cattle of several coat colors. An insertion of a cytosine was detected in an albino Braunvieh calf, which resulted in a frameshift which caused a premature stop codon at residue 316. This insertion was found in the homozygous state in this calf and the genomic DNA of two related albino calves. All six parents of these calves were heterozygous for this insertion. However, an albino Holstein calf did not have this insertion, nor was any other mutation detected in the partial TYR sequence obtained from the genomic DNA available. Diagnostic genotyping tests were developed to detect this mutation in Braunvieh cattle.
Mammalian Genome | 1995
S. M. Schmutz; F. L. S. Marquess; T. G. Berryere; J. S. Moker
Five Charolais families known to segregate for both horned and polled were selected and tested for linkage analysis by use of microsatellites and karyotyping for Robertsonian translocation 1;29. No recombinants were found between any of these markers and the polled phenotype or each other. When statistical analysis was performed, the logarithm of the odds (LOD) indicated that there was 100% linkage occurring between the markers and the phenotype (p<0.001). These microsatellite markers, TGLA49 and BM6438, can be assumed to be very close to the actual gene that determines the polled phenotype. Another linked marker, SOD1, was physically mapped, which places all of these markers within 1q12–14, very near the centromere of Chromosome (Chr) 1. A homozygous polled cow was identified in this study by following the alleles at both markers and the phenotypes in her family.
Genetics | 2007
Julie A. Kerns; Edward J. Cargill; Leigh Anne Clark; Sophie I. Candille; T. G. Berryere; Michael Olivier; George Lust; Rory J. Todhunter; Sheila M. Schmutz; Keith E. Murphy; Gregory S. Barsh
Mutations of pigment type switching have provided basic insight into melanocortin physiology and evolutionary adaptation. In all vertebrates that have been studied to date, two key genes, Agouti and Melanocortin 1 receptor (Mc1r), encode a ligand-receptor system that controls the switch between synthesis of red–yellow pheomelanin vs. black–brown eumelanin. However, in domestic dogs, historical studies based on pedigree and segregation analysis have suggested that the pigment type-switching system is more complicated and fundamentally different from other mammals. Using a genomewide linkage scan on a Labrador × greyhound cross segregating for black, yellow, and brindle coat colors, we demonstrate that pigment type switching is controlled by an additional gene, the K locus. Our results reveal three alleles with a dominance order of black (KB) > brindle (kbr) > yellow (ky), whose genetic map position on dog chromosome 16 is distinct from the predicted location of other pigmentation genes. Interaction studies reveal that Mc1r is epistatic to variation at Agouti or K and that the epistatic relationship between Agouti and K depends on the alleles being tested. These findings suggest a molecular model for a new component of the melanocortin signaling pathway and reveal how coat-color patterns and pigmentary diversity have been shaped by recent selection.
Mammalian Genome | 2005
T. G. Berryere; Julie A. Kerns; Gregory S. Barsh; Sheila M. Schmutz
The type of pigment synthesized in mammalian hair, yellow–red pheomelanin or black–brown eumelanin, depends on the interaction between Agouti protein and the Melanocortin 1 receptor. Although the genetics of pigmentation is broadly conserved across most mammalian species, pigment type-switching in domestic dogs is unusual because a yellow–tan coat with variable amounts of dark hair is thought to be caused by an allele of the Agouti locus referred to as fawn or sable (ay). In a large survey covering thirty seven breeds, we identified an Agouti allele with two missense alterations, A82S and R83H, which was present (heterozygous or homozygous) in 41 dogs (22 breeds) with a fawn or sable coat, but was absent from 16 dogs (8 breeds) with a black-and-tan or tricolor phenotype. In an additional 33 dogs (14 breeds) with a eumelanic coat, 8 (German Shepherd Dogs, Groenendaels, Schipperkes, or Shetland Sheepdogs) were homozygous for a previously reported mutation, non-agouti R96C; the remainder are likely to have carried dominant black, which is independent of and epistatic to Agouti. This work resolves some of the complexity in dog coat color genetics and provides diagnostic opportunities and practical guidelines for breeders.
Mammalian Genome | 1994
S. M. Schmutz; T. G. Berryere; J. S. Moker; T. D. Thue; D. C. Winkelman
Bovine gene mapping is progressing rapidly using syntenic group mapping based on somatic cell hybrids and linkage, and to a lesser extent on in situ hybridization. Single chromosome DNA libraries are a logical next step, and this was, therefore, the aim of our laboratory. Since we have access to several cattle with t(1;29) and this chromosome is readily distinguishable, we chose this as our first target—recognizing that we would not produce a “single” chromosome library in the strict sense because two autosomes are represented. We utilized an inverted microscope and a micromanipulator fitted with glass instruments pulled specifically to dissect off approximately 100 t(1:29) chromosomes per microdrop. A glass chamber made to accommodate a hanging drop was used to extract the DNA under a dissecting microscope. The DNA was then cleaved with EcoRI and inserted in λgtwes arms. Host cells were then infected with these phage and positive clones obtained. The first clone, isolated from this library by hybridization with a human collagen 6A1 cDNA, was mapped by in situ hybridization to bovine Chromosome (Chr) 1q12–q14, near the centromere. The second clone, an anonymous DNA fragment (D1S11), was mapped to 1q43–q46, near the terminal end.
Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 1998
S. M. Schmutz; J. S. Moker; T. G. Berryere
The genes for pituitary-specific transcription factor (PIT1), propionyl coenzyme A carboxylase, β-polypeptide (PCCB), transferrin (TF), trichohyalin (THH), and involucrin (IVL) were mapped to cattle chromosome 1 (BTA 1) by isotopic in situ hybridization. Two of the loci were mapped from cattle PCR products and three from human ATCC probes. PIT1 localized to segment 1q2; PCCB to 1q3; and TF, THH, and IVL to 1q4. These localizations agree with the homology previously shown between BTA 1 and human chromosome 3 (HSA 3). Some homology with HSA 1 has been established with the mapping of THH and IVL to BTA 1q4.
Animal Genetics | 2003
T. G. Berryere; S. M. Schmutz; R. J. Schimpf; C. M. Cowan; J. Potter
Animal Genetics | 2007
S. M. Schmutz; T. G. Berryere
Journal of Heredity | 2003
Sheila M. Schmutz; T. G. Berryere; N. M. Ellinwood; Julie A. Kerns; Gregory S. Barsh