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Labrador Retriever
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=== Colour === {{Main|Labrador Retriever coat colour genetics}} [[File:3labradorcols.jpg|thumb|alt=three Labrador retrievers: Yellow, black, and chocolate|The three colour varieties, from front to back: Yellow, black, and chocolate]] Labradors are registered in three colours: Solid ''black'', ''yellow'' (anything from creamy white to fox-red), and ''chocolate'' (medium to dark brown; originally called "liver").<ref> {{cite web |title=Breed colours |website=thekennelclub.org.uk |publisher=[[The Kennel Club]] |url=http://www.thekennelclub.org.uk/services/public/breed/colours.aspx?id=2048 |access-date=10 January 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150110200738/http://www.thekennelclub.org.uk/services/public/breed/colours.aspx?id=2048 |archive-date=10 January 2015 }} </ref> Puppies of all colours can occur in the same [[Litter (animal)|litter]]. Coat colour is determined primarily by three genes, called [[Melanocortin 1 receptor|''MC1R'']], [[Agouti coloration genetics|''Agouti'']], and ''CBD103''. If a dog carries [[Wild type|wild type alleles]] at all three loci, the dog will have a yellow coat. If a dog has a loss-of-function mutation at MC1R, it will also have a yellow coat, regardless of the genotypes at the other two loci. Dogs carrying wild-type alleles for MC1R and Agouti, together with the black allele of CBD103, will have a black coat.<ref name=Candille-Kaelin-etal-2007> {{cite journal |last1=Candille |first1=Sophie I. |last2=Kaelin |first2=Christopher B. |last3=Cattanach |first3=Bruce M. |last4=Yu |first4=Bin |last5=Thompson |first5=Darren A. |last6=Nix |first6=Matthew A. |last7=Kerns |first7=Julie A. |last8=Schmutz |first8=Sheila M. |last9=Millhauser |first9=Glenn L. |last10=Barsh |first10=Gregory S. |year=2007 |title=A Ξ²-defensin mutation causes black coat colour in domestic dogs |journal=[[Science (journal)|Science]] |volume=318 |issue=5855 |pages=1418β1423 |pmid=17947548 |doi=10.1126/science.1147880 |bibcode=2007Sci...318.1418C |pmc=2906624 | issn=0036-8075}} </ref>{{efn| "Production of yellow versus black pigment in dogs is controlled by three genes: MC1R, Agouti, and CBD103. Dogs carrying wild-type alleles for all three genes have a yellow coat resulting from Agouti antagonism of MC1R signaling in melanocytes (yellow Great Dane, top). Dogs carrying a loss-of-function mutation at MC1R have a yellow coat, regardless of their genotype at Agouti or CBD103 (yellow Labrador retriever, middle). Dogs carrying wild-type alleles for MC1R and Agouti, together with the dominant black allele of CBD103 (KB) have a black coat resulting from the interaction between a Ξ²-defensin and MC1R (black Curly Coated Retriever,{{nobr| bottom)." β Candille, Kaelin, ''et al.'' (2007)<ref name=Candille-Kaelin-etal-2007/>}} }} According to a 2011 study, 13 out of 245 Labradors studied were [[heterozygous]] for the M264V mutation responsible for the [[melanistic mask]], and one was [[homozygous]]. Within this breed, the trait cannot be determined simply by appearance.<ref> {{cite journal |last1=Conant |first1=E.K. |last2=Juras |first2=R. |last3=Cothran |first3=E.G. |year=2011 |title=Incidence of the mask phenotype M264V mutation in Labrador retrievers |journal=Research in Veterinary Science |volume=91 |issue=3 |pages=e98βe99 |doi=10.1016/j.rvsc.2011.02.002 |pmid=21353269 }} </ref> [[File:ChocolateLabPup.jpg|thumb|The most common places where pigmentation is visible are the nose, lips, gums, and the rims of the eyes.]]
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