Comparative molecular genetics of the German Shepherd dog

Includes bibliographical references (leaves 105-111). Microsatellite markers were used to measure genetic diversity and population differentiation within and between domestic dog breeds. The German Shepherd Dog was compared with typical outbred mongrel dogs, Dachshunds, Staffordshire Bull Terriers a...

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Main Author: Coutts, Natalie June
Other Authors: Harley, Eric
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Chemical Pathology 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8622
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spelling ftunivcapetownir:oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/8622 2024-09-09T19:35:50+00:00 Comparative molecular genetics of the German Shepherd dog Coutts, Natalie June Harley, Eric 2004 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8622 eng eng Division of Chemical Pathology Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8622 Chemical Pathology Master Thesis Masters MMed 2004 ftunivcapetownir 2024-06-25T03:54:18Z Includes bibliographical references (leaves 105-111). Microsatellite markers were used to measure genetic diversity and population differentiation within and between domestic dog breeds. The German Shepherd Dog was compared with typical outbred mongrel dogs, Dachshunds, Staffordshire Bull Terriers and a cohort of other pedigreed dogs representing 30 recognised breeds. Although archaeological records report that grey wolves (Canis lupus) were domesticated approximately 14 000 years ago, mtDNA analysis suggests that domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and grey wolves diverged in multiple events over 100 000 years ago. Subsequently, the movement of humans and their dogs resulted in extensive gene flow between dog populations for thousands of years. Breeding practices to obtain distinctive pnenotypic uniformity were recently introduced, resulting in pure-bred dogs becoming essentially closed gene pools. However, further mtDNA analyses have reported unexpectedly high levels of variability, supported by microsatellite loci with heterogeneities of between 36% and 55% being reported for some dog breeds. Microsatellite analyses of 15 polymorphic canine loci are reported. German Shepherd Dogs and outbred mongrel dogs expressed diversity values of 4.0 alleles per locus in the former and 6.4 in the later (corrected for population size by jack-knifing with 1 000 pseudoreplications), with expected heterozygosities of 62% and 83%, respectively. German Shepherd Dogs showed a moderate loss of genetic diversity relative to outbred dogs, but not sufficient to describe the breed as highly inbred. However, in comparison with other pure-bred dogs examined, they expressed the least genetic diversity, with Dachshunds having 5.2, Staffordshire Bull Terriers 4.8 and the composite group of pedigreed dogs 6.0 alleles per locus, with expected heterozygosities of 72%, 67% and 80%, respectively. Significant population differentiation (GST = 0.103; RST = 0.058) between German Shepherd Dogs and the outbred dogs illustrates the effect of genetic ... Master Thesis Canis lupus University of Cape Town: OpenUCT
institution Open Polar
collection University of Cape Town: OpenUCT
op_collection_id ftunivcapetownir
language English
topic Chemical Pathology
spellingShingle Chemical Pathology
Coutts, Natalie June
Comparative molecular genetics of the German Shepherd dog
topic_facet Chemical Pathology
description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 105-111). Microsatellite markers were used to measure genetic diversity and population differentiation within and between domestic dog breeds. The German Shepherd Dog was compared with typical outbred mongrel dogs, Dachshunds, Staffordshire Bull Terriers and a cohort of other pedigreed dogs representing 30 recognised breeds. Although archaeological records report that grey wolves (Canis lupus) were domesticated approximately 14 000 years ago, mtDNA analysis suggests that domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and grey wolves diverged in multiple events over 100 000 years ago. Subsequently, the movement of humans and their dogs resulted in extensive gene flow between dog populations for thousands of years. Breeding practices to obtain distinctive pnenotypic uniformity were recently introduced, resulting in pure-bred dogs becoming essentially closed gene pools. However, further mtDNA analyses have reported unexpectedly high levels of variability, supported by microsatellite loci with heterogeneities of between 36% and 55% being reported for some dog breeds. Microsatellite analyses of 15 polymorphic canine loci are reported. German Shepherd Dogs and outbred mongrel dogs expressed diversity values of 4.0 alleles per locus in the former and 6.4 in the later (corrected for population size by jack-knifing with 1 000 pseudoreplications), with expected heterozygosities of 62% and 83%, respectively. German Shepherd Dogs showed a moderate loss of genetic diversity relative to outbred dogs, but not sufficient to describe the breed as highly inbred. However, in comparison with other pure-bred dogs examined, they expressed the least genetic diversity, with Dachshunds having 5.2, Staffordshire Bull Terriers 4.8 and the composite group of pedigreed dogs 6.0 alleles per locus, with expected heterozygosities of 72%, 67% and 80%, respectively. Significant population differentiation (GST = 0.103; RST = 0.058) between German Shepherd Dogs and the outbred dogs illustrates the effect of genetic ...
author2 Harley, Eric
format Master Thesis
author Coutts, Natalie June
author_facet Coutts, Natalie June
author_sort Coutts, Natalie June
title Comparative molecular genetics of the German Shepherd dog
title_short Comparative molecular genetics of the German Shepherd dog
title_full Comparative molecular genetics of the German Shepherd dog
title_fullStr Comparative molecular genetics of the German Shepherd dog
title_full_unstemmed Comparative molecular genetics of the German Shepherd dog
title_sort comparative molecular genetics of the german shepherd dog
publisher Division of Chemical Pathology
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8622
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8622
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