Wolf to Woof!
"Besides the
dog, only one other mammal has that rare combination of unusual
genetic diversity & a widespread, well-mixed gene pool: humans."
- Robert Wayne of the University of California, Los
Angeles.
Article Reprinted as a courtesy
and with permission from George Johnson, txtwriter.com
"...From what creature did
the domestic dog arise? Darwin suggested that wolves, coyotes, and
jackals -- all of which can interbreed and produce fertile offspring--
may all have played a role, producing a complex dog ancestry that
would be impossible to unravel. In the 1950s, Nobel Prize-winning
behaviorist Konrad Lorenz suggested some dog breeds derive from
jackals, others from wolves.
Based on anatomy, most biologists have put their
money on the wolf, but until recently there was little hard evidence,
and, as you might expect if you know scientists, lots of opinions.
The issue was finally settled in 1997 by an international
team of scientists led by Robert Wayne of the University of California,
Los Angeles. To sort out the evolutionary origin of the family dog,
Wayne and his colleagues used the techniques of molecular biology
to compare the genes of dogs with those of wolves, coyotes and jackals.
Wayne's team collected blood, tissue, or hair from
140 dogs of sixty-seven breeds, and 162 wolves from North America,
Europe, Asia, and Arabia. From each sample they extracted DNA from
the tiny organelles within cells called mitochondria.
While the chromosome DNA of an animal cell derives
from both parents, the mitochondrial DNA comes entirely from the
mother. Biologists love to study mitochondrial DNA because of this
simple line of descent, female-to-female-to-female. As changes called
mutations occur due to copying mistakes or DNA damage, the mitochondrial
DNA of two diverging lines becomes more and more different. Ancestors
can be clearly identified when you are studying mitochondrial DNA,
because clusters of mutations are not shuffled into new combinations
like the genes on chromosomes are. They remain together as a particular
sequence, a signature of that line of descent.
When Wayne looked at his canine mitochondrial DNA
samples, he found that wolves and coyotes differ by about 6% in
their mitochondrial DNA, while wolves and dogs differ by only 1%.
Already it smelled like the wolf was the ancestor.
Wayne's team then focused their attention on one
small portion of the mitochondrial DNA called the control region,
because it was known to vary a lot among mammals. Among the sixty
seven breeds of dogs, Wayne's team found a total of 26 different
sequences in the control region, each differing from the others
at one or a few sites. No one breed had a characteristic sequence
-- rather, the breeds of dogs share a common pool of genetic diversity.
Wolves had 27 different sequences in the control region, none of
them exactly the same as any dog sequence, but all very similar
to the dog sequences, differing from them at most at 12 sites along
the DNA, and usually fewer.
Coyote and jackal were a lot more different from
dogs than wolves were. Every coyote and jackal sequence differed
from any dog sequence by at least 20 sites, and many by far more.
That settled it. Dogs are domesticated
wolves.
Using statistical methods to compare the relative
similarity of the sequences, Wayne found that all the dog sequences
fell into four distinct groups. The largest, containing 19 of the
26 sequences and representing 3/4 of modern dogs, resulted from
a single female wolf lineage. The three smaller groups seem to represent
later events when other wolves mated with the now-domesticated dogs.
Domestication, it seems, didn't happen very often, and perhaps only
once.
The large number of different dog sequences, and
the fact that no wolf sequences are found among them, suggests that
dogs must have been separated from wolves for a long time. The oldest
clear fossil evidence for dogs is 12,000 - 14,000 years ago, about
when farming arose. But that's not enough time to accumulate such
a large amount of mitochondrial DNA difference. Perhaps dogs before
then just didn't look much different from wolves, and so didn't
leave dog-like fossils. Our species first developed speech and left
Africa about 50,000 years ago. I bet that's when dogs came aboard,
when our hunter-gatherer ancestors first encountered them. They
would have been great hunting companions..."
Glossary
chromosomes thread-like structures
in the nucleus of cells. Chromosomes are made of genes. Genes are
made of DNA. DNA controls inherited traits such as appearance and
hair color
DNA means deoxyribose nucleic acid. DNA is found
in the nucleus of cells. DNA is the material that stores genetic
information. It determines inherited traits like eye color.
gene a short length of a chromosome which controls
a characteristic of an organism
genetic engineering altering genetic material by
combining fragments of DNA from different organisms
genome the total amount of the genetic information
for a given species such as a dog or human
heredity science of passing traits from parents
to young
molecular biology the study of DNA and proteins
pedigree diagram showing the inheritance of particular
characteristics from one generation to later generations
purebred an organism that always produces the same
traits in it's offspring
species the smallest classification group of organisms.
organisms of the same species mate and produce healthy young
variation appear to have traits different than
others of its species

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