Genetic mystery of Indian white tiger solved

Update: 2013-05-25 01:11 GMT
The strikingly beautiful, milky coats of white Bengal tigers are caused by a single change in a known pigment gene, a new study has found.

The white tigers, a variant of Bengal tigers were discovered in the Indian jungles, and since then their unique coat colour has remained a mystery. Now, scientists have discovered that their spectacular white coats are produced by a single change in a known pigment gene.

‘The white tiger represents part of the natural genetic diversity of the tiger that is worth conserving, but is now seen only in captivity,’ said Shu-Jin Luo of China’s Peking University. Luo, Xiao Xu, Ruiqiang Li, and their colleagues advocate a proper captive management programme to maintain a healthy Bengal tiger population including both white and orange tigers. They say it might even be worth considering the reintroduction of white tigers into their wild habitat. The researchers mapped the genomes of a family of 16 tigers living in Chimelong Safari Park, including both white and orange individuals.

They then sequenced the whole genomes of each of the three parents in the family. Those genetic analyses led them to a pigment gene, called SLC45A2, which had already been associated with light colouration in modern Europeans and in other animals, including horses, chickens, and fish. The variant found in the white tiger primarily inhibits the synthesis of red and yellow pigments but has little to no effect on black, which explains why white tigers still show characteristic dark stripes.

Historical records of white tigers on the Indian subcontinent date back to the 1500s, Luo noted, but the last known free-ranging white tiger was shot in 1958.

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