Quick Summary

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Phenotype: Dogs with one copy of a KRT71 curl allele (C1 or C2) have wavy coats, and dogs with two copies have curly coats.
Mode of Inheritance: Incomplete dominance
Alleles: N = No curl, C1 = Curl 1, C2 = Curl 2
Breeds appropriate for testing: C1: many breeds including Airedale Terrier, American Water Spaniel, Australian Labradoodle, Bichon Frise, Boykin Spaniel, Chesapeake Bay Retriever, Dachshund, Fox Terrier (Wire-haired), French Bulldog, Goldendoodle, Havanese, Irish Water Spaniel, Kerry Blue Terrier, Kuvasz, Labradoodle, Lagotto Romagnolo, Maltese, Mudi, Poodle, Portuguese Water Dog, Schapendoes, Soft Coated Wheaten Terrier, Welsh Terrier, and Crossbreeds
C2: American Water Spaniel, Curly Coated Retriever, Chesapeake Bay Retriever, Bichon Frise, French Bulldog, Irish Terrier, Lagotto Romagnolo, Mudi and Spanish Water Dog.
Explanation of Results:
- Dogs with N/N genotype are expected to have a straight coat. They cannot transmit these curl alleles to their offspring.
- Dogs with N/C1 or N/C2 genotypes are expected to have a wavy coat. They may transmit the curl allele to 50% of their offspring. Matings between two dogs with one copy of any curl allele (N/C1 or N/C2) are expected to produce 50% puppies with wavy hair and 25% puppies with curly hair.
- Dogs with C1/C1, C1/C2 or C2/C2 genotypes are expected to have a curly coat. They will transmit a curl allele to all of their offspring.
Dog Coat Color and Type - Havanese Panel
$115 per animal
Additional coat colors $15 per test

Two variants in the Keratin-71 (KRT71) gene are associated with curly hair in dogs: a missense variant (R151W) referred to as Curl 1(C1), and an indel variant (S422Rfs) referred to as Curl 2 (C2). These alleles are likely inherited as an incomplete dominant trait, which means that dogs with two copies of any of these curl alleles (C1/C1, C1/C2 or C2/C2) have curly coats and dogs with one copy (N/C1 or N/C2) have wavy coats. As of September 2024, the Curl test assays both C1 and C2 alleles.
The C1 allele was originally discovered in the Portuguese Water Dog but is known to be present in multiple dog breeds, including Airedale Terrier, American Water Spaniel, Australian Labradoodle, Bichon Frise, Boykin Spaniel, Chesapeake Bay Retriever, Dachshund, Fox Terrier (Wire-haired), French Bulldog, Goldendoodle, Havanese, Irish Water Spaniel, Kerry Blue Terrier, Kuvasz, Labradoodle, Lagotto Romagnolo, Maltese, Mudi, Poodle, Schapendoes, Soft Coated Wheaten Terrier, Welsh Terrier, and Crossbreeds. However, the C1 allele does not explain all curly coats in dogs.
The C2 allele has been identified in the Curly Coated Retriever, Chesapeake Bay Retriever, Bichon Frise, French Bulldog, Irish Terrier, Lagotto Romagnolo, Spanish Water Dog and American Water Spaniel. Curly Coated Retrievers appear to be fixed for C2, meaning that all dogs tested by researchers were homozygous for C2 (C2/C2). Researchers that discovered C2 did find one Poodle with the C2 allele, although Poodles are expected to be virtually fixed for C1.
Researchers also noted that a small number of dogs with curly coat did not have either C1 or C2, suggesting that other yet unknown curly coat variants exist in dogs.
