PMEL is involved in snake colour pattern transition from blotches to stripes
Corn snakes are emerging models for animal colouration studies. Here, we focus on the Terrazzo morph, whose skin pattern is characterized by stripes rather than blotches. Using genome mapping, we discover a disruptive mutation in the coding region of the Premelanosome protein ( PMEL ) gene. Our tran...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2024-09, Vol.15 (1), p.7655-13, Article 7655 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Corn snakes are emerging models for animal colouration studies. Here, we focus on the Terrazzo morph, whose skin pattern is characterized by stripes rather than blotches. Using genome mapping, we discover a disruptive mutation in the coding region of the
Premelanosome protein
(
PMEL
) gene. Our transcriptomic analyses reveal that
PMEL
expression is significantly downregulated in Terrazzo embryonic tissues. We produce corn snake
PMEL
knockouts, which present a comparable colouration phenotype to Terrazzo and the subcellular structure of their melanosomes and xanthosomes is also similarly impacted. Our single-cell expression analyses of wild-type embryonic dorsal skin demonstrate that all chromatophore progenitors express
PMEL
at varying levels. Finally, we show that in wild-type embryos
PMEL
-expressing cells are initially uniformly spread before forming aggregates and eventually blotches, as seen in the adults. In Terrazzo embryos, the aggregates fail to form. Our results provide insights into the mechanisms governing colouration patterning in reptiles.
Corn snakes are a useful model organism for studying skin pigmentation. Here they characterize the Terrazzo morph and identify the role of PMEL in the patterning of pigmented cells in the skin, explaining how the wild-type blotches change to stripes in Terrazzo. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-024-51927-0 |