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Polydactyl cat

A polydactyl cat is a cat with a congenital physical anomaly called polydactyly (also known as polydactylism or hyperdactyly), which causes the cat to be born with more than the usual number of toes on one or more of its paws. Cats with this genetically inherited trait are most commonly found along the East Coast of North America (in the United States and Canada) and in South West England and Wales.

One of the polydactyl cats at the Ernest Hemingway House in Key West, Florida. This particular cat has seven (two extra) toes on each paw.

Occurrence edit

Polydactyly is a congenital abnormality that can be inherited in an autosomal dominant manner. Some cases of polydactyly are caused by mutations in the ZRS, a genetic enhancer that regulates expression of the sonic hedgehog (SHH) gene in the limb.[1] The SHH protein is an important signalling molecule involved in patterning of many body elements, including limbs and digits.

Normal cats have a total of 18 toes, with five toes on each fore paw, and four toes on each hind paw; polydactyl cats may have as many as nine digits on their front or hind paws. Both Jake, a Canadian polydactyl cat, and Paws, an American polydactyl cat, were recognised by Guinness World Records as having the highest number of toes on a cat, 28. Tigger, a tabby polydactyl cat, also had 28 toes, but passed before it could be verified by Guinness World Records.[2] Various combinations of anywhere from four to seven toes per paw are common.[3] Polydactyly is most commonly found on the front paws only; it is rare for a cat to have polydactyl hind paws only, and polydactyly of all four paws is even less common.[4]

History and folklore edit

The condition seems to be most commonly found in cats along the East Coast of North America (in the United States and Canada)[5] and in South West England, Wales and Kingston-upon-Hull.[4] Polydactyl cats have been extremely popular as ship's cats.[5] Although there is some controversy over whether the most common variant of the trait originated as a mutation in New England or was brought there from Britain, there seems to be agreement that it spread widely as a result of cats carried on ships originating in Boston, Massachusetts, and the prevalence of polydactyly among the cat population of various ports correlates with the dates when they first established trade with Boston.[5] Contributing to the spread of polydactyl cats by this means, sailors were long known to value polydactyl cats especially for their extraordinary climbing and hunting abilities as an aid in controlling shipboard rodents.[5] Some sailors thought they bring good luck at sea.[5] The rarity of polydactyl cats in Europe may be because they were hunted and killed based on superstitions about witchcraft.[5]

Genetic work studying the DNA basis of the condition indicates that many different mutations in the same ZRS area can all lead to polydactyly.[1]

Author Ernest Hemingway became a famous aficionado of polydactyl cats after a ship captain gave him a six-toed cat that he named Snowball.[6][7][8] Upon Hemingway's death in 1961, his former home in Key West, Florida, became a museum and a home for his cats, and it currently houses approximately 50 descendants of his cats (about half of which are polydactyl).[8] Because of his love for these animals, polydactyl cats are sometimes referred to as "Hemingway cats."[8][9]

Naming edit

Nicknames for polydactyl cats include Hemingway cats,[8][9] mitten cats,[8] conch cats, boxing cats, mitten-foot cats, snowshoe cats, boston-toed cats, thumb cats , six-fingered cats, and Cardi-cats. Two specific breeds recognized by some cat fancier clubs are the American Polydactyl and Maine Coon Polydactyl.

Breeding edit

American Polydactyl cats are bred as a specific cat breed, with specific physical and behavioral characteristics in addition to extra digits.[10]

The American Polydactyl is not to be confused with the pedigree Maine Coon Polydactyl. The polydactyl form of the Maine Coon is being reinstated by some breeders.[11][self-published source?]

Genetics edit

In the case of preaxial polydactyly of the Maine Coon cat (Hemingway mutant) a mutation of the cis-regulatory element ZRS (ZPA regulator sequence) is associated. ZRS is a noncoding element, 800 kilobasepairs (kb) remote to the target gene SHH. An ectopic expression of SHH is seen on the anterior side of the limb. Normally SHH is expressed in an organiser region, called the zone of polarizing activity (ZPA) on the posterior limb side. From there it diffuses anteriorly, laterally to the growth direction of the limb. In the mutant mirroring smaller ectopic expression in a new organiser region is seen on the posterior side of the limb. This ectopic expression causes cell proliferation delivering the raw material for one or more new digits.[12][13] An identical sequence at this position serves the same function in human and mice and cause similar symptoms when mutated. Different mutations have different specific effects: for example, while the Hemingway (Hw) mutant tends to mostly induce extra fingers in the fore limbs, many other mutations affect the posterior limbs too.[1]

Polydactyly is a spontaneous complex phenotypic variation, developed in one generation. In the concrete preaxial form of the Hemingway (Hw) mutant the variation is induced by a single point mutation in a noncoding cis-regulatory element for SHH. In an extensive phenotypic variation like this, one or more complete digits at each single limb are developed including nerves, blood vessels, muscles and ligaments. The physiology of the digits can be perfect. This complex phenotypic result cannot be explained by the mutation alone. The mutation can only induce the variation. In the consequence of the mutation, thousands of events, each different from the wildtype, occur on different organisation layers, such as expression changes of other genes, cell-cell signal exchange, cell differentiation, cell and tissue growth. The summarized small random changes on all layers build the raw material and the process steps for the generation of the plastic variation.[3] The mentioned form of polydactyly of the Hemingway mutant shows a biased variation. In a recent empirical study first the number of extra toes of 375 mutant Maine Coon cats were variable (polyphenism) and second, the number of extra toes followed a discontinuous statistical distribution. They were not equally distributed as one might expect of an identical single point mutation. The example demonstrates that the variation is not explained completely by the mutation alone.[3]

See also edit

Notable polydactyl cats edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Lettice LA, Hill AE, Devenney PS, Hill RE (2008). "Point mutations in a distant sonic hedgehog cis-regulator generate a variable regulatory output responsible for preaxial polydactyly". Human Molecular Genetics. 17 (7): 978–85. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddm370. hdl:20.500.11820/76c18e1b-ba87-49c6-9da7-c837187646a5. PMID 18156157.
  2. ^ "Most toes on a cat". 24 September 2002. Retrieved 2015-06-29.
  3. ^ a b c Lange, Axel; Nemeschkal, Hans L.; Müller, Gerd B. (2013). "Biased Polyphenism in Polydactylous Cats Carrying a Single Point Mutation: The Hemingway Model for Digit Novelty". Evolutionary Biology. 41 (2): 262–75. doi:10.1007/s11692-013-9267-y. S2CID 10844604.
  4. ^ a b "7 Amazing Facts About Polydactyl Cats". The Spruce Pets. Retrieved 2020-12-22.
  5. ^ a b c d e f JillGat (29 June 1999). Zotti, Ed (ed.). "Is it true many New England cats have extra paws because Boston ships' captains considered them lucky?". The Straight Dope. Chicago Reader. Sun-Times Media Group. ISSN 1096-6919. from the original on 19 June 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018. Several sources I checked recounted the story you told, that ships' captains carried them onboard because they were considered lucky (and better mousers, one source said). An article from Cornell University's Cat Watch (1998) looked at studies done on polydactyl cats from the 1940s to the 1970s, and tentatively concluded that the trait probably initially occurred in cats who came over from England to the Boston area with the Puritans in the mid 1600s. There was also speculation in the article that the mutation might have developed in cats already in the Boston area [...] In Europe, polydactyl cats are rare because they were practically wiped out during medieval times due to superstitions about witchcraft (Kelly, Larson, 1993).
  6. ^ . www.hemingwayhome.com. Archived from the original on 2011-08-16.
  7. ^ "11 Writers Who Really Loved Cats". 2013-03-11. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  8. ^ a b c d e Syufy, Franny (28 January 2018) [Updated; originally published 20 May 2004]. "The Amazing Hemingway Cats". Cats (Cat FAQs). The Spruce. Dotdash. from the original on 19 June 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  9. ^ a b Nichols, Karen (26 September 2008). "The Hemingway Cats Get a Reprieve!". Lifestyle. Catster. Belvoir Media Group. from the original on 19 June 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018. In fact, polydactyl cats are often referred to as 'Hemingway Cats.'
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on January 17, 2007. Retrieved 2007-01-20.
  11. ^ Kus, Beth E. "The History of the Polydactyl Maine Coon". Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  12. ^ Lettice LA, Heaney SJ, Purdie LA, Li L, de Beer P, Oostra BA, Goode D, Elgar G, Hill RE, de Graaff E (2003). "A long-range Shh enhancer regulates expression in the developing limb and fin and is associated with preaxial polydactyly" (PDF). Human Molecular Genetics. 12 (14): 1725–35. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddg180. PMID 12837695.
  13. ^ Lettice LA, Williamson I, Wiltshire JH, Peluso S, Devenney PS, Hill AE, Essafi A, Hagman J, Mort R, Grimes G, DeAngelis CL, Hill RE (2012). "Opposing functions of the ETS factor family define Shh spatial expression in limb buds and underlie polydactyly". Developmental Cell. 22 (2): 459–67. doi:10.1016/j.devcel.2011.12.010. PMC 3314984. PMID 22340503.

Further reading edit

  • Chapman, V. A.; Zeiner, Fred N. (1961). "The anatomy of polydactylism in cats with observations on genetic control". The Anatomical Record. 141 (3): 205–17. doi:10.1002/ar.1091410305. PMID 13878202. S2CID 44384678.
  • Danforth CH (1947). "Heredity of polydactyly in the cat". The Journal of Heredity. 38 (4): 107–12. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a105701. PMID 20242531.
  • Danforth, C. H. (1947). "Morphology of the feet in polydactyl cats". American Journal of Anatomy. 80 (2): 143–71. doi:10.1002/aja.1000800202. PMID 20286212.
  • Jude, A. C. (1955). Cat genetics. Fond du Lac: All-Pets Books. OCLC 1572542.
  • Lockwood, Samuel (1874). "Malformations". The Popular Science Monthly. Vol. IV. New York: D. Appleton and Company. p. 383.
  • Robinson, Roy (1977). Genetics for Cat Breeders (2nd ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-021209-8.
  • Sis RF, Getty R (1968). "Polydactylism in cats". Veterinary Medicine, Small Animal Clinician. 63 (10): 948–51. PMID 5188319.
  • Todd NB (1966). "The independent assortment of dominant white and polydactyly in the cat". The Journal of Heredity. 57 (1): 17–8. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a107451. PMID 5917255.
  • Vella, Carolyn M.; Shelton, Lorraine M.; McGonagle, John J.; Stanglein, Terry W. (1999). Robinson's Genetics for Cat Breeders and Veterinarians (4th ed.). Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-7506-4069-5.
  • Wenthe, M; Lazarz, B (1995). "Ein Fall von atavistischer Polydaktylie an der Hinterextremität des Hauskatze" [A case of atavistic polydactyly at the hind limb of a cat]. Kleintierpraxis (in German). 40 (8): 617–9.
  • Wittmann, F (1992). "Polydactylism in a Cat". Der Praktische Tierarzt. 73 (8): 709.

External links edit

  • Owner's appeal over cat's 26 toes

polydactyl, polydactyl, with, congenital, physical, anomaly, called, polydactyly, also, known, polydactylism, hyperdactyly, which, causes, born, with, more, than, usual, number, toes, more, paws, cats, with, this, genetically, inherited, trait, most, commonly,. A polydactyl cat is a cat with a congenital physical anomaly called polydactyly also known as polydactylism or hyperdactyly which causes the cat to be born with more than the usual number of toes on one or more of its paws Cats with this genetically inherited trait are most commonly found along the East Coast of North America in the United States and Canada and in South West England and Wales One of the polydactyl cats at the Ernest Hemingway House in Key West Florida This particular cat has seven two extra toes on each paw Contents 1 Occurrence 2 History and folklore 3 Naming 4 Breeding 5 Genetics 6 See also 6 1 Notable polydactyl cats 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksOccurrence editPolydactyly is a congenital abnormality that can be inherited in an autosomal dominant manner Some cases of polydactyly are caused by mutations in the ZRS a genetic enhancer that regulates expression of the sonic hedgehog SHH gene in the limb 1 The SHH protein is an important signalling molecule involved in patterning of many body elements including limbs and digits Normal cats have a total of 18 toes with five toes on each fore paw and four toes on each hind paw polydactyl cats may have as many as nine digits on their front or hind paws Both Jake a Canadian polydactyl cat and Paws an American polydactyl cat were recognised by Guinness World Records as having the highest number of toes on a cat 28 Tigger a tabby polydactyl cat also had 28 toes but passed before it could be verified by Guinness World Records 2 Various combinations of anywhere from four to seven toes per paw are common 3 Polydactyly is most commonly found on the front paws only it is rare for a cat to have polydactyl hind paws only and polydactyly of all four paws is even less common 4 nbsp Kitten with 23 toes nbsp Right front paw of a polydactyl cat Circles represent digits The circle with a question mark indicates what might be a separate digit The rightmost circle is for a small underdeveloped clawless digit nbsp Preaxial polydactyly Hemingway mutant frequency of polydactylous digits per individual nbsp Polydactyl red Maine Coon kitten nbsp Preaxial polydactyly ectopic Shh expression Hemingway mutant mouse right forelimb nbsp Preaxial polydactyly Maine Coon cat Hemingway mutant right forefoot nbsp A domestic true polydactyl catHistory and folklore editThe condition seems to be most commonly found in cats along the East Coast of North America in the United States and Canada 5 and in South West England Wales and Kingston upon Hull 4 Polydactyl cats have been extremely popular as ship s cats 5 Although there is some controversy over whether the most common variant of the trait originated as a mutation in New England or was brought there from Britain there seems to be agreement that it spread widely as a result of cats carried on ships originating in Boston Massachusetts and the prevalence of polydactyly among the cat population of various ports correlates with the dates when they first established trade with Boston 5 Contributing to the spread of polydactyl cats by this means sailors were long known to value polydactyl cats especially for their extraordinary climbing and hunting abilities as an aid in controlling shipboard rodents 5 Some sailors thought they bring good luck at sea 5 The rarity of polydactyl cats in Europe may be because they were hunted and killed based on superstitions about witchcraft 5 Genetic work studying the DNA basis of the condition indicates that many different mutations in the same ZRS area can all lead to polydactyly 1 Author Ernest Hemingway became a famous aficionado of polydactyl cats after a ship captain gave him a six toed cat that he named Snowball 6 7 8 Upon Hemingway s death in 1961 his former home in Key West Florida became a museum and a home for his cats and it currently houses approximately 50 descendants of his cats about half of which are polydactyl 8 Because of his love for these animals polydactyl cats are sometimes referred to as Hemingway cats 8 9 Naming editNicknames for polydactyl cats include Hemingway cats 8 9 mitten cats 8 conch cats boxing cats mitten foot cats snowshoe cats boston toed cats thumb cats six fingered cats andCardi cats Two specific breeds recognized by some cat fancier clubs are the American Polydactyl and Maine Coon Polydactyl Breeding editAmerican Polydactyl cats are bred as a specific cat breed with specific physical and behavioral characteristics in addition to extra digits 10 The American Polydactyl is not to be confused with the pedigree Maine Coon Polydactyl The polydactyl form of the Maine Coon is being reinstated by some breeders 11 self published source Genetics editThis section is missing information about patterns of inheritance Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page January 2021 In the case of preaxial polydactyly of the Maine Coon cat Hemingway mutant a mutation of the cis regulatory element ZRS ZPA regulator sequence is associated ZRS is a noncoding element 800 kilobasepairs kb remote to the target gene SHH An ectopic expression of SHH is seen on the anterior side of the limb Normally SHH is expressed in an organiser region called the zone of polarizing activity ZPA on the posterior limb side From there it diffuses anteriorly laterally to the growth direction of the limb In the mutant mirroring smaller ectopic expression in a new organiser region is seen on the posterior side of the limb This ectopic expression causes cell proliferation delivering the raw material for one or more new digits 12 13 An identical sequence at this position serves the same function in human and mice and cause similar symptoms when mutated Different mutations have different specific effects for example while the Hemingway Hw mutant tends to mostly induce extra fingers in the fore limbs many other mutations affect the posterior limbs too 1 Polydactyly is a spontaneous complex phenotypic variation developed in one generation In the concrete preaxial form of the Hemingway Hw mutant the variation is induced by a single point mutation in a noncoding cis regulatory element for SHH In an extensive phenotypic variation like this one or more complete digits at each single limb are developed including nerves blood vessels muscles and ligaments The physiology of the digits can be perfect This complex phenotypic result cannot be explained by the mutation alone The mutation can only induce the variation In the consequence of the mutation thousands of events each different from the wildtype occur on different organisation layers such as expression changes of other genes cell cell signal exchange cell differentiation cell and tissue growth The summarized small random changes on all layers build the raw material and the process steps for the generation of the plastic variation 3 The mentioned form of polydactyly of the Hemingway mutant shows a biased variation In a recent empirical study first the number of extra toes of 375 mutant Maine Coon cats were variable polyphenism and second the number of extra toes followed a discontinuous statistical distribution They were not equally distributed as one might expect of an identical single point mutation The example demonstrates that the variation is not explained completely by the mutation alone 3 See also editPolydactyly in early tetrapods Ship s cat List of cat body type mutationsNotable polydactyl cats edit Lil Bub PaddlesReferences edit a b c Lettice LA Hill AE Devenney PS Hill RE 2008 Point mutations in a distant sonic hedgehog cis regulator generate a variable regulatory output responsible for preaxial polydactyly Human Molecular Genetics 17 7 978 85 doi 10 1093 hmg ddm370 hdl 20 500 11820 76c18e1b ba87 49c6 9da7 c837187646a5 PMID 18156157 Most toes on a cat 24 September 2002 Retrieved 2015 06 29 a b c Lange Axel Nemeschkal Hans L Muller Gerd B 2013 Biased Polyphenism in Polydactylous Cats Carrying a Single Point Mutation The Hemingway Model for Digit Novelty Evolutionary Biology 41 2 262 75 doi 10 1007 s11692 013 9267 y S2CID 10844604 a b 7 Amazing Facts About Polydactyl Cats The Spruce Pets Retrieved 2020 12 22 a b c d e f JillGat 29 June 1999 Zotti Ed ed Is it true many New England cats have extra paws because Boston ships captains considered them lucky The Straight Dope Chicago Reader Sun Times Media Group ISSN 1096 6919 Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2018 Several sources I checked recounted the story you told that ships captains carried them onboard because they were considered lucky and better mousers one source said An article from Cornell University s Cat Watch 1998 looked at studies done on polydactyl cats from the 1940s to the 1970s and tentatively concluded that the trait probably initially occurred in cats who came over from England to the Boston area with the Puritans in the mid 1600s There was also speculation in the article that the mutation might have developed in cats already in the Boston area In Europe polydactyl cats are rare because they were practically wiped out during medieval times due to superstitions about witchcraft Kelly Larson 1993 hemingwayhome com Cats www hemingwayhome com Archived from the original on 2011 08 16 11 Writers Who Really Loved Cats 2013 03 11 Retrieved 2018 07 19 a b c d e Syufy Franny 28 January 2018 Updated originally published 20 May 2004 The Amazing Hemingway Cats Cats Cat FAQs The Spruce Dotdash Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2018 a b Nichols Karen 26 September 2008 The Hemingway Cats Get a Reprieve Lifestyle Catster Belvoir Media Group Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2018 In fact polydactyl cats are often referred to as Hemingway Cats American Polydactyl Archived from the original on January 17 2007 Retrieved 2007 01 20 Kus Beth E The History of the Polydactyl Maine Coon Retrieved 2008 02 12 Lettice LA Heaney SJ Purdie LA Li L de Beer P Oostra BA Goode D Elgar G Hill RE de Graaff E 2003 A long range Shh enhancer regulates expression in the developing limb and fin and is associated with preaxial polydactyly PDF Human Molecular Genetics 12 14 1725 35 doi 10 1093 hmg ddg180 PMID 12837695 Lettice LA Williamson I Wiltshire JH Peluso S Devenney PS Hill AE Essafi A Hagman J Mort R Grimes G DeAngelis CL Hill RE 2012 Opposing functions of the ETS factor family define Shh spatial expression in limb buds and underlie polydactyly Developmental Cell 22 2 459 67 doi 10 1016 j devcel 2011 12 010 PMC 3314984 PMID 22340503 Further reading editChapman V A Zeiner Fred N 1961 The anatomy of polydactylism in cats with observations on genetic control The Anatomical Record 141 3 205 17 doi 10 1002 ar 1091410305 PMID 13878202 S2CID 44384678 Danforth CH 1947 Heredity of polydactyly in the cat The Journal of Heredity 38 4 107 12 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals jhered a105701 PMID 20242531 Danforth C H 1947 Morphology of the feet in polydactyl cats American Journal of Anatomy 80 2 143 71 doi 10 1002 aja 1000800202 PMID 20286212 Jude A C 1955 Cat genetics Fond du Lac All Pets Books OCLC 1572542 Lockwood Samuel 1874 Malformations The Popular Science Monthly Vol IV New York D Appleton and Company p 383 Robinson Roy 1977 Genetics for Cat Breeders 2nd ed Elsevier ISBN 978 0 08 021209 8 Sis RF Getty R 1968 Polydactylism in cats Veterinary Medicine Small Animal Clinician 63 10 948 51 PMID 5188319 Todd NB 1966 The independent assortment of dominant white and polydactyly in the cat The Journal of Heredity 57 1 17 8 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals jhered a107451 PMID 5917255 Vella Carolyn M Shelton Lorraine M McGonagle John J Stanglein Terry W 1999 Robinson s Genetics for Cat Breeders and Veterinarians 4th ed Oxford Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 7506 4069 5 Wenthe M Lazarz B 1995 Ein Fall von atavistischer Polydaktylie an der Hinterextremitat des Hauskatze A case of atavistic polydactyly at the hind limb of a cat Kleintierpraxis in German 40 8 617 9 Wittmann F 1992 Polydactylism in a Cat Der Praktische Tierarzt 73 8 709 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Polydactyl cats Owner s appeal over cat s 26 toes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polydactyl cat amp oldid 1200365208, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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