Genetic Structure of the Purebred Domestic Dog
University of Washington · Missouri College · +2 more institutions
Abstract
We used molecular markers to study genetic relationships in a diverse collection of 85 domestic dog breeds. Differences among breeds accounted for approximately 30% of genetic variation. Microsatellite genotypes were used to correctly assign 99% of individual dogs to breeds. Phylogenetic analysis separated several breeds with ancient origins from the remaining breeds with modern European origins. We identified four genetic clusters, which predominantly contained breeds with similar geographic origin, morphology, or role in human activities. These results provide a genetic classification of dog breeds and will aid studies of the genetics of phenotypic breed differences.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 27.74
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
10- HGHeidi G. Parker
University of Washington, Missouri College, Fred Hutch Cancer Center, University of Missouri
- LVLisa V. Kim
University of Washington, Missouri College, Fred Hutch Cancer Center, University of Missouri
- NBNathan B. Sutter
University of Washington, Missouri College, Fred Hutch Cancer Center, University of Missouri
- SMScott M. Carlson
University of Washington, Missouri College, Fred Hutch Cancer Center, University of Missouri
- TDTravis D. Lorentzen
University of Washington, Missouri College, Fred Hutch Cancer Center, University of Missouri
Topics & keywords
- Purebred
- Breed
- Biology
- Microsatellite
- Evolutionary biology
- Genetic diversity
- Genetic variation
- Phylogenetic tree