Abstract: | The biological behavior of the pigmentary phenotypes of four breeds of cattle has been analysed: the black pigmentation of Holstein Friesian; the red pigmentation of Limousin; the dilution in Charolais; and the postnatal disappearance of red pigmentation in Chianina. The analytic techniques included the characterization of melanins by high-performance liquid chromatography, the examination of follicular melanocytes by light microscopy, and the examination of melanosomes by electron microscopy. The black phenotype was very strongly eumelanogenic. The red phenotype in Limousin is polymorphic: individual follicular melanocytes contain both mature eumelanosomes and pheomelanosomes. Charolais and Chianina cattle exhibited a dramatic reduction in melanogenic activity, which was characterized by the almost exclusive presence of prephaoemelanosomes in Charolais and of immature premelanosomes in Chianina. In the dilute Charolais phenotype, the density of distribution of follicular melanocytes also seemed to be reduced. The genes that are responsible for these four phenotypes seem to act on the maturation, differentiation, and density of distribution of the melanosomes. |