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80beats
« Study: Circumcision of HIV-Positive Men Doesn’t Protect Women
How a Jockey’s “Monkey Crouch” Makes Horses Faster »

Revealed: The Genetic Secret of the Dachshund’s Stubby Legs

dachshundWhy does a wiener dog look like a wiener, with its body poised on such short, stubby legs? Researchers say they’ve discovered the answer in a single genetic mutation that’s found in dachshunds, corgis, basset hounds, and other short-legged dog breeds. Study coauthor Heidi Parker says this gene may turn on growth mechanisms at the wrong time during foetal development, stunting the growth of long bones in the leg and making them curvy. The trait affects only the legs, unlike the small-all-over effect seen in miniature or toy breeds, such as poodles [Reuters].

The mutation popped up sometime after modern dogs diverged from wolves, researchers say, and it’s a dominant gene–meaning that a dog with only one copy of the gene will show obvious signs of it. Having joined the genetic repertoire of dogs, the gene was available for selection by dog breeders whenever they wanted to develop a downsized breed. The basset hound, for example, was bred for its short legs so people on horseback could keep up with it during hunting, Dr. Parker said [The New York Times].

In the study, published in Science, Parker and her colleagues compared the genomes of 95 short-legged dogs from the eight breeds with the genomes of 702 dogs from 64 breeds without the trait. Then, in a more detailed analysis, the researchers pinpointed an extra stretch of DNA on chromosome 18 in every dog from the eight short-legged breeds, but in none of 204 control dogs they examined [Science News]. They determined that the squat dogs have an extra copy of a gene that codes for a growth-promoting protein, and suggest that the overabundant protein interferes with normal fetal growth.

The extra gene is a so-called “retrogene.” In rare cases, messenger RNA — molecules made from DNA that carry information to cellular machinery, which then makes proteins—can get turned back into DNA. If this DNA then gets plopped back into the genome in a new neighborhood, and conditions are right for this genetic new kid on the block to become active, the extra DNA becomes a retrogene [Science News]. The researchers say they were surprised to find that just one retrogene could cause such a dramatic physical change, and suggest that medical researchers should investigate whether a similar mechanism is at work in people with a form of dwarfism called hypochondroplasia, which represents about one-third of the unexplained cases of dwarfism in humans [Reuters].

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Image: flickr / soggydan

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July 20th, 2009 3:25 PM Tags: dogs, evolution, genetics
by Eliza Strickland in Living World | 7 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

7 Responses to “Revealed: The Genetic Secret of the Dachshund’s Stubby Legs”

  1. 1.   Jumblepudding Says:
    July 21st, 2009 at 9:39 am

    Dachshunds as a breed have gotten even shorter legs over the last 100 years through the “caricature” effect of selective breeding. Look at the earliest photographs of what was considered a “perfect” dachshund and you will see longer legs. Does this mean the gene has copied itself in the dachshund during this time, or is there more than one mechanism working?

  2. 2.   robot makes music Says:
    July 21st, 2009 at 3:31 pm

    It’s selective breeding at work – maybe the shorter legged ones have dual copies of the gene thanks to the breeding work of humans.

  3. 3.   marty Says:
    July 22nd, 2009 at 12:53 pm

    i shudder at the thought of how many tax dollars went into such a useless study.

  4. 4.   zachary Says:
    July 22nd, 2009 at 1:35 pm

    Yeah, I hate genetic research too marty, what has it ever gotten us? Wonder if marty had someone close to him suffering from any form of dwarfism he would consider finding underlying causes for such phenotypes a waste of time. BOOOOOO Knowledge! GOOOOOO Ignorance!

  5. 5.   Chewbacca Says:
    August 28th, 2009 at 1:56 pm

    “The basset hound, for example, was bred for its short legs so people on horseback could keep up with it during hunting….”

    Seems to be a mistake seeing as how short legs are not really helpful for a dog to keep up with a horse. It seems far more logical that a peop;e NOT on horseback or rather on foot would favor stubby legs.

  6. 6.   Enrorphossy Says:
    November 16th, 2009 at 4:38 am

    What’s up everyone, I’m redone to the forum and decent wanted to translate hey.

  7. 7.   K-Cups coffee Says:
    May 25th, 2011 at 12:25 am

    Interesting entry, keep up the good work… bookmarked!

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