Saddle-tan
Saddle-tan
General description
Tan-colouring is versatile in the propotion of dark and light marks. This gene regulates the forms of black&tan and saddle-tan for Basset Hounds and Welsh Corgis.
Breeds
Basset Hound, Cardigan Welsh Corgi, Pembroke Welsh Corgi, Welsh Corgi (Cardigan/Pembroke)
Order details
Test number | 8307 |
Sample material | 0.5 ml EDTA blood, 2x cheek swab, 1x special swab (eNAT) |
Test duration | 7-14 working days |
Test specifications
Inheritance | Allelic series: St dominant over bt |
Gene | RALY |
Mutation | INS |
Literature | OMIA:001806-9615 |
Detailed description
Tan-points originate genetically from the at-allel at the A-locus. The appearance of those marks can vary in some breeds. Large black areas with small tan-points are called black&tan, while the occurrence of large bright areas with a black saddle on the dogs back is called saddle-tan accordingly. This difference can be determined genetically in Welsh Corgi and Basset Hound. The causative allel for saddle-tan, which was found in wolves as well, is dominant to the recessive duplication, that is responsible for black&tan. Therefore, saddle-tan dogs can exhibit +/+ and +/dup as their genotype, black&tan dogs are dup/dup always.