Science How Kitties Get Their Stripes - Recent research of domestic cats has exhibited which genes give felines the particular patterns of their fur.

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Cats can now show off their spots and stripes!
How cats obtain their stripes has been a conundrum in the natural sciences for decades. The basics of animal color schemes have been a subject of interest in developmental and evolutionary biology for many years.

The typical tabby pattern of domestic cats with black markings in regular spacing on a light backdrop varies greatly in shape and color, and many of the species are comparable to wild cats.

But scientists knew nothing about their unique appearance, which had until recently been so popular as tabs. The scientists claim that in research published this week in Nature Communications, the genes in the embryo's skin cells are triggered before the cat grows fur.

Recent research of home cats has shown which genes give felines the particular patterns of their fur and that wild cats such as tigers and cheetahs, are capable of producing the same genetics with their distinguishing coats.

Early skin cells also imitate tabby strips underneath the microscope, a finding never before seen in embryonic cells.

The name 'tabby' comes from the al-'Attābiyya district in Baghdad, which in the 16th century produced exquisite silk taffeta. But perhaps the stripes are from the immediate progenitor of the domestic cat, the striped wildcat, from the near east.
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The genetics behind the colors and patterns of domestic cats have long intrigued scientists.

Greg Barsh and his colleagues, a researcher at Hudson Alpha Institute of Biotechnology in Alabama, examined over 1,000 embryos taken from veterinaries that spawned wild cats. This was part of an ethically accepted study protocol.

Two different types of skin were found by the scientists, each of which expressed a distinct group of genes. These genes included the Dickkopf WNT Signaling Pathway Inhibitor 4, or DKK4, that differed the most from other genes.

If all goes as planned, the cells containing DKK4 ultimately turn into dark markers for tabby cats. However, there are often mutations that result in various colors and patterns, such as white spots or thinner stripes. Pigmentation changes may also occur, for example, an all-black layer results in the production of a dark pigment in pigment cells that should have generated colors.
 
Man this was nice, no child rape no human trash just a cute kittie and some knowledge. Bravo!
 
This was the least depressing thing I've read in weeks, and it involves a subject I like to personally nerd out over (animal coloration genes). Bless you for this reprieve from the usual news.
 
nobody knows and the data is fucked by some stupid comet impact.
the european wild cat is the most likely source, but who knows?
 
I love how all tabbies have an M on their foreheads for "meow".
 
Tiger tabbys are nature's reminder that nature will do as it pleases.View attachment 2526899
That is a brown Mackerel tabby. They are called that after the fish. They are considered to be the "wild type" pattern for house cats.
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These are your "basic" tabby types, as published by Hartwell 2002.

Spotted tabbies are basically Mackerel tabbies with an additional gene that causes skipping in the stripe, so it breaks into spots. That is why the spots are vertically aligned.

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The above is a Ticked tabby. The agouti pattern on the body looks very similar to the breed known as the Abyssinian, which is considered to be one of the oldest cat breeds.

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The above is an excellent example of a Ruddy coat Abyssinian.

Cat and genetics just happen to be two of my autistic topics of interest.
 
Cool! This explains something I've noticed too.
To do it yourself:
1. Get bright laser pointer (blue or green works best)
2. Shine on tabby (DO NOT POINT IN KITTY'S FACE! AVOID EYES!)
3. Observe how the light flickers and changes between the stripes and the not-stripes.
I'm well My cat Princess Pudge
Is a brown mackerel tabby.
They are commonly referred to as tiger tabbys you know cause strips and all. Also its the oldest common type of house cat.
My cat Princess Pudge
Is a brown mackerel tabby.
You know, stripes and all.
🌸
 
Cool! This explains something I've noticed too.
To do it yourself:
1. Get bright laser pointer (blue or green works best)
2. Shine on tabby (DO NOT POINT IN KITTY'S FACE! AVOID EYES!)
3. Observe how the light flickers and changes between the stripes and the not-stripes.

My cat Princess Pudge
Is a brown mackerel tabby.
You know, stripes and all.🌸
One warning I would make, is that a lot of the laser pointers you can buy on ebay are not actually conformant with US or other regulations.

This is not to say that the regulations are set where human eyes will fail- given the blink reflex will protect against even levels over 5mW- and cats are probably a lot more resilient- but there is a level of danger there. Esp with violet/blue ones. That's not to say that all such lasers are unsafe.
If you and your cat can have fun with a red laser pointer, or a green one from a seller that might actually have tested it and complied with regulations, then that might be a safer way to go.
 
Cool! This explains something I've noticed too.
To do it yourself:
1. Get bright laser pointer (blue or green works best)
2. Shine on tabby (DO NOT POINT IN KITTY'S FACE! AVOID EYES!)
3. Observe how the light flickers and changes between the stripes and the not-stripes.

My cat Princess Pudge
Is a brown mackerel tabby.
You know, stripes and all.
🌸
lazer pointers are the feline equivalent of a treadmill.
Also did you tag my post just to correct my abysmal grammer?
 
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