Every little dog has its day, common gene
Study finds DNA that halts growth
![]() This undated handout photo provided by the journal Science shows Gibson, a Great Dane, right, and Zoie, a Chihuahua in Grass Valley, Calif. (AP Photo/Science, Deanne Fitzmaurice) |
LOS ANGELES -- Researchers have finally solved one of the great canine mysteries: Why are small dogs small?
As it turns out, small dogs all bear a tiny piece of regulatory DNA that shuts off the gene that produces a powerful growth factor.
The gene regulator was probably inherited from a miniature wolf about 15,000 years ago -- although it has since disappeared from the wolf population -- and has spread rapidly throughout the dog world by human intervention.
"All dogs under 20 pounds have this -- all of them," said biologist K. Gordon Lark of the University of Utah, one of the authors of the paper published today in the journal Science. "That's extraordinary."
The discovery helps explain the great diversity in size among dog breeds, the greatest diversity among any mammalian species. It also may have implications for humans.
"By learning how genes control body size in dogs, we are apt to learn something about how skeletal size is genetically programmed in humans," said geneticist Elaine A. Ostrander of the National Human Genome Research Institute, who led the study.
The gene in question, IGF-1, is the blueprint for a protein called insulin-like growth factor, which not only plays a role in human growth but also is implicated in cancer and certain skeletal diseases.
Learning how it is controlled will have many applications in humans, said Jeff Sossamon of the American Kennel Club's Canine Health Foundation, who was not involved in the research.
"The canine model is perfect for human research, because we share 85 percent of our genetic makeup with dogs," he said. "And we share 300 common diseases."
The study was triggered by Lark, who began studying the genetics of soybeans. Along the way, he adopted a stray dog called Georgie, who turned out to be a Portuguese water dog. When Georgie died in 1996, Lark contacted Karen Miller, a breeder in New York state, for a replacement.
When she found out Lark studied genetics, she began pestering him to study dog genetics and sent him a Portuguese water dog, Mopsa . Within three months, she also sent him 5,000 genetic histories of individual dogs.
Lark and his colleague, biologist Kevin Chase, soon realized that the Portuguese water dogs were ideal for genetic studies because they all descended from a small number of "founders."
Lark speculated that small dogs arose because "a small wolf couldn't survive in nature."![]()
