For anyone interested in the "nitty gritty" on Smokey here's a link to the full PDF which includes color pictures:
http://www.genetics.org/content/168/3/1507.full.pdf
and here's the Abstract:
The Dominant white, Dun and Smoky Color Variants in Chicken Are Associated With Insertion/Deletion Polymorphisms in the PMEL17 Gene
Abstract: Dominant white,
Dun, and
Smoky are alleles at the
Dominant white locus, which is one of the major loci affecting plumage color in the domestic chicken. Both
Dominant white and
Dun inhibit the expression of black eumelanin.
Smoky arose in a White Leghorn homozygous for
Dominant white and partially restores pigmentation.
PMEL17 encodes a melanocyte-specific protein and was identified as a positional candidate gene due to its role in the development of eumelanosomes. Linkage analysis of
PMEL17 and
Dominant white using a red jungle fowl/White Leghorn intercross revealed no recombination between these loci. Sequence analysis showed that the
Dominant white allele was exclusively associated with a 9-bp insertion in exon 10, leading to an insertion of three amino acids in the PMEL17 transmembrane region. Similarly, a deletion of five amino acids in the transmembrane region occurs in the protein encoded by
Dun. The
Smoky allele shared the 9-bp insertion in exon 10 with
Dominant white, as expected from its origin, but also had a deletion of 12 nucleotides in exon 6, eliminating four amino acids from the mature protein. These mutations are, together with the recessive
silver mutation in the mouse, the only
PMEL17 mutations with phenotypic effects that have been described so far in any species.