Tools:Print|E-mail Us|Most Popular
DNA: why small dogs are small and big dogs are big
www.chinaview.cn 2007-04-06 21:38:06
  Adjust font size:

    BEIJING, April 6 (Xinhuanet) -- A team of geneticists curious about why dogs differ so much in size from a tiny Chihuahua to a Great Dane think they have found the DNA answer after enlisting the help of hundreds of Portuguese water dog owners to obtain DNA samples and body-size measurements.

    This breed of dogs has a remarkable three-fold range in size, from 25 to 75 pounds. By analyzing the dogs¡¯DNA, the researchers found the piece of their genetic material that strongly correlated with their size.

    "Dogs have the biggest range of sizes of any mammal in existence," said biologist K. Gordon Lark of the University of Utah. "One of the big questions has always been where does this range of sizes come from?"

    Lark and his colleagues think they've found part of the answer in piece of canine DNA that regulates growth to keep small dogs small.

    The DNA snippet isn't actually a gene -- it¡¯s called a regulatory sequence. This sequence is next to a gene that regulates a growth-inducing protein hormone that helps humans and other mammals grow from birth to adolescence.

    In small dogs, one or more mutations in the regulatory sequence suppress the gene's activity, so it won't produce as much of the hormone, Lark said, effectively preventing any Labrador-sized Chihuahuas.

    Medium and large dogs are missing this regulatory sequence, said study team member Kevin Chase, also of the University of Utah. So Great Danes can grow to their normal, intimidating size. Other genetic material that has yet to be identified also likely contribute to the size of these dogs, he added.

    To confirm their findings, detailed in the April 6 issue of the journal Science, the researchers examined 3,241 other dogs from 143 different breeds, including Chihuahuas, pugs, toy poodles, Saint Bernards, Irish wolfhounds and standard poodles.

    In all of the small breeds, the same regulatory sequence was found.

    "All dogs under 20 pounds have this -- all of them," Lark said. "That's extraordinary."

    Oddly, Rottweilers also have the sequence, but other genetic factors likely make them big, Chase said.

    Dogs were domesticated from wolves around 12,000 years ago, and because small dogs from all over the world have this piece of DNA, the researchers think the genetic instructions to make small dogs must be just as old.

    "Since this is found in all small dogs, it either got into dogs when they were first domesticated, or it was a small wolf that dogs descended from," Lark said, noting that the sequence isn't found in wolves today.

    The researchers say small dogs likely proliferated because humans saw them as good companions.

    "Tiny dogs are not particularly functional," said Chase, who owns a toy-poodle-Maltese mix. "They don't hunt with you. They don't protect your house. They don't pull carts. They're just small and sweet."

    (Agencies)

Editor: Gareth Dodd
Tools:Print|E-mail Us|Most Popular
Related Stories
Home Sci/Tech
  Back to Top