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Splashed white

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The white head, tail, and lower portions of this foal are typical of splashed white. The impression of the pattern is like the horse has been dipped in white paint.

Splashed white or splash is a horse coat color pattern in the "overo" family of spotting patterns that produces pink-skinned, white markings. Many splashed whites have very modest markings, while others have the distinctive "dipped in white paint" pattern. Blue eyes are a hallmark of the pattern, and splash may account for otherwise "solid" blue-eyed horses. Splashed white occurs in a variety of geographically divergent breeds, from Morgans in North America to Kathiawari horses in India. The splashed white pattern is also associated with congenital deafness, though most splashed whites have normal hearing. Splashed white can be caused by multiple variants across two different genes, for which genetic testing is available.[1][2]

Characteristics

The splashed white pattern is characterized by the appearance of having been dipped, feet-first, into white paint. Blue eyes are common, but not universal.[3][4][5][6] The margins of the white markings are crisp, smooth, blocky, and well-defined.[7][6] The head and legs are white, and the tail is often white or white-tipped.[7][5][6] The underside of the body is white, and a connected white patch often spreads smoothly up either side of the thorax.[6] On its own, the splashed white pattern is seldom responsible for white markings that reach the topline, and so it has been categorized as one of the "overo" patterns by Paint horse and Pinto horse registries.[3]

Splashed white mare and foal with mask-like white faces, blue eyes, and dark-colored spots on their lips.

As sabino-type markings also originate on the underside, some splashed whites can be mistaken for cleanly marked sabinos.[7] Both patterns can be present on the same horse, but splashed white markings are crisp and blocky, and horizontally distributed. In particular, the face markings of splashed whites are straight-edged and bottom heavy, whereas those of sabinos are often tapering or feathered, and often vertical in orientation. The presence of additional white patterning genes can intensify the amount or obscure the characteristics of splashed white markings.[4][5] There is some association between splashed white and deafness in horses that are very white, but more research is needed to determine how this occurs.[4] White extending onto the ears is hypothesized to correlate to deafness. SW-1 and SW-2 have been found in homozygous form, but SW-3, SW-4, SW-4, and SW-6 may be homozygous lethal.[4][1]

Minimal splashed whites

Breed registries for which minimum or maximum white markings are a factor in registration have created imaginary lines to simplify the selection process:

  • From the ear, to the eye, to the corner of the mouth, to the chin groove,
  • the knee on the foreleg, and
  • the hock on the hindleg.
Bright blue eyes and a skewed blaze that does not reach the lip suggest splashed white genes are present in this Icelandic foal.

White markings extending past these lines are considered "pinto", "paint" or "colored" while white markings which do not cross these lines are not considered to suggest these traits. However, horses without "excessive white markings" can still have the potential to produce "high white" or distinctly spotted offspring. Splashed white horses have produced generations of "solid" horses, followed by an errant, classically marked splashed white. Discreetly marked splashed whites are responsible for some families of cropout American Quarter Horses.[3][4]

The minimal expression of the splashed white pattern can include few or no white markings at all. When only minimal markings are present, other qualities can belie splashed white. Stars and snips may lopsided, off-center, or otherwise strangely placed. Blazes are usually blocky or straight-edged, and bottom-heavy. Splashed white blazes may also be crooked or skewed to one side.[5] Sabinos with a bold blaze almost invariably have white on the lip or chin, and this is not the case for the facial white of a minimally marked splash; the upper lip typically remains colored.[5][8] Leg markings in a minimally marked splashed white range from hind coronets to high-whites on all four, or marked hindlegs and unmarked forelegs. While sabino leg markings are often tapering with distal patches, the leg markings on a splashed white usually have crisp borders.[3]

The most reliable identifier of the splashed white pattern is one or more blue, or parti-colored eyes.[7][3][5]

Inheritance and prevalence

This American Paint Horse has a white tail and a large, connected area of white across the lower part of her body, suggesting splash genes. The jagged edges are possibly due to sabino traits.
A mare that tested positive for SW-1. Note the sabino-like jagged and lace-like pattern on the belly.

DNA tests exist for six forms of splashed white across two different genes. SW-1, SW-3, SW-5, and SW-6 are mutations of MITF, while SW-2 and SW-4 are mutations of PAX3.[1] SW-1 is thought have originated hundreds of years ago and today has been identified in the American Quarter Horse, American Paint Horse, Icelandic horse, Miniature horse, Morgan horse, Shetland pony and Trakehner. SW-2 has been mainly found in and SW-3 has been exclusively found in certain lines of Quarter horses and Paints, with SW-3 being particularly rare.[2][4][9] SW-2 has also been found in a few Noriker and Lipizzan horses.[10] Another allele of splash informally called "Macchiato", produced by the gene MITF:p.N310S, has only been found in a single Franche-Montagne horse, probably a spontaneous mutation, and that individual was sterile.[4][11] Splashed white 6 is thought to originate with a dual registered Paint horse and Quarter horse stallion.[12]

The splashed white phenotype can be caused by mutations to either MITF or PAX3. SW-1 is the MITFprom1 mutation, the most prevalent. It appears to be several hundred years old and predates the development of modern breeds. SW-2 is a PAX3 mutation (PAX3C70Y) once thought to be traced to a single Quarter Horse mare foaled in 1987, however it appears to actually have originated earlier and has been found in other breeds.[13][10] SW-3, the MITFC280Sfs*20 mutation, has been seen in Quarter Horses but is very rare. Some horses of Quarter Horse lineage carry more than one splash mutation.[4][11]

The splashed white pattern was first studied in Finnish Drafts and Welsh ponies by Klemola in 1933.[14] Klemola's multiple studies on the topic have since been largely discredited, his text describing to detail a pattern now recognised as sabino, and his illustrations featuring horses that according to modern knowledge would be a mixture of splashed whites, tobianos, sabinos, and combinations of multiple spotting factors.[15] Originally believed to be very rare outside of Europe, splash is turning out to be more common than previously thought, possibly due to the pattern's tendency to masquerade as modest markings. For example, minimally marked splashed whites have been responsible for cropouts among American Quarter Horses.[3]

Since the original study, SW-1 has been confirmed in the Finnhorse by genetic testing.[16] In addition to breeds identified as carrying the SW-1, -2 or -3 alleles, color patterns described as splashed white but not yet verified via genetic testing have also been identified in American Saddlebreds, Shire horse, Clydesdales, and the Irish Tinker or Gypsy horse.[3][4][5]

There may be additional forms not yet mapped. However studies suggest that it is not part of the linkage group that includes roan and tobiano.[7] The KIT gene is not thought to be a candidate gene for splashed white. Preliminary studies from the early part of the 20th century suggested that splashed white was the result of a recessive gene, however this is no longer believed to be the case.[3] It is more likely that many splashed whites go unidentified, whether because their markings are too minimal to register as "pinto" with breeders, confusion with sabino, or the confounding effect of multiple white spotting patterns.[3][5] It seems therefore more likely that splashed white is the result of an incomplete dominant gene, with homozygotes exhibiting more extensive white than heterozygotes.[4] Just as the presence of additional white patterning genes can increase the amount of white, other genes may be responsible for restricting the expression of splash.[5]

In addition, other patterns have a similar look: in particular, some forms of sabino and splash may be confused with each other, or the two patterns may exist in the same horse.[3] In the Gypsy horse, the pattern called "blagdon" is described as "a solid colour with white "splashed" up from underneath."[17] The genetic mechanisms behind certain traits, such as blue eyes in a few Arabian horses with otherwise minimal markings, have yet to be identified, though there is speculation that splash genes could be involved.[18]

Clean, crisp white markings that do not reach the ears, pigmented "medicine hat" marking across ears and poll, a colored lip spot, and blue eyes indicate this "tovero" is probably a tobiano-splash blend.

Health concerns

It is possible that the SW-3 allele might produce non-viable embryos if homozygous. At present, this cannot be ruled in or out, but mating of two horses that carry SW-3 is discouraged. Genetic testing has identified individuals who are homozygous for SW-1 and a single individual homozygous for SW-2, thus SW-1 and SW-2 probably do not have potential lethal characteristics.[2][1]

Some horses with the splashed white pattern have been shown to have congenital deafness, though many or most have normal hearing.[3][8][19] This type of deafness is probably similar to instances of deafness in white or piebald, blue-eyed examples in other species. In white-coated cats and dogs with deafness, an absence of melanocytes in the inner ear leads to death of the hair cells, which are necessary for perceiving sound.[19] The presence of pigment around the outside of the ears - which most splash horses have - does not prove the presence of that necessary pigment in the inner ear. There must be pigment inside the inner ear to prevent this problem.[2] Domestic horses often cope well with deafness, and deaf horses may go undiagnosed. Some deaf horses are more skittish than normal, while others are distinctly calmer. Deafness in horses can be diagnosed by brainstem auditory evoked potential (BAEP), which is minimally invasive and requires no sedation and minimal restraint.[19] While blue eyes and a white face are often associated with deafness in other species, apron-faced, non-splash horses are not known to be deaf. Nor is the presence of one blue, one normal eye indicative of unilateral deafness. The case horse in Hardland's 2006 case study had one blue eye, while the other was parti-colored, but the horse was bilaterally deaf.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "UC Davis Splashed White". Retrieved 2019-05-31.
  2. ^ a b c d Splashed White Overo (SW-1, SW-2, SW-3)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Splashed white". Genetic Equation. American Paint Horse Association. Archived from the original on 2014-08-22.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bailey, Ernest Frank; Brooks, Samantha A. (2013). Horse Genetics. CABI. pp. 73–76. ISBN 9781780643298. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Laura Behning. "Splashed White". Morgan Colors. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  6. ^ a b c d Vrotsos, Paul D.; Elizabeth M. Santschi; James R. Mickelson (2001). "The Impact of the Mutation Causing Overo Lethal White Syndrome on White Patterning in Horses" (PDF). AAEP Proceedings. 47. American Association of Equine Practitioners: 385–391.
  7. ^ a b c d e Brooks, S. Studies of genetic variation at the KIT locus and white spotting patterns in the horse. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Kentucky, 2006. [1]
  8. ^ a b Dan Phillip Sponenberg (2003). "5 Patterns Characterized by Patches of White". Equine Color Genetics (2 ed.). Blackwell Publishing. pp. 85–6. ISBN 0-8138-0759-X.
  9. ^ "Splashed-Whte". Veterinary Genetics Laboratory. University of California-Davis. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  10. ^ a b "Novel insights into Sabino1 and splashed white coat color patterns in horses". doi:10.1111/age.12657. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  11. ^ a b Hauswirth, Regula; Haase, Bianca; et al. (April 12, 2012). "Mutations in MITF and PAX3 Cause "Splashed White" and Other White Spotting Phenotypes in Horses". PLOS Genetics. 8 (4): e1002653. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002653. PMC 3325211. PMID 22511888.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  12. ^ "A De Novo MITF Deletion Explains a Novel Splashed White Phenotype in an American Paint Horse". doi:10.1093/jhered/esaa009. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. ^ "Correction: Mutations in MITF and PAX3 Cause "Splashed White" and Other White Spotting Phenotypes in Horses". Aug 19, 2019. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1008321. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  14. ^ Klemola, V (1933). "The "pied" and "splashed white" patterns in horses and ponies". Journal of Heredity. 24 (2): 65–69. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a103713.
  15. ^ Viitanen, Johanna (2007). Hevosen värit [Equine Colors] (in Finnish). Läyliäinen: Vudeka. pp. 110–111. ISBN 978-952-99464-8-8.
  16. ^ Alerini, Leena: Uusia värihevosia, uusia testiohjeita Archived 2013-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, 27.6.2013
  17. ^ "Gypsy Vanner Breed Standard" (PDF). Gypsy Vanner Horse Society [GVHS]. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-12-24. Retrieved 2013-02-28.
  18. ^ "Should dominant white be considered as sabino white?". Horsegenetics.com. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  19. ^ a b c d Harland, Malte M.; Allison J. Stewart; Arvle E. Marshall; Ellen B. Belknap (2006). "Diagnosis of deafness in a horse by brainstem auditory evoked potential". Canadian Veterinary Journal. 47: 151–4. PMC 1345730. PMID 16579041.