Abstract

Simple SummaryFor dog breeders, health is one of the main criteria when choosing a breeding animal; thus, selection for good anatomy is the key to reduce orthopedic disorders. In many dog breeds, radiographic screening for canine hip and elbow dysplasia is a compulsory test for breeding; however, these multifactorial traits are determined by genetic and environmental factors. Therefore, it is extremely difficult to eliminate these disorders from the population. In natural selection, such traits can be “purged” out of the population with inbreeding. The study aimed to examine the inbreeding-purge of canine hip and elbow dysplasia in the border collie breed. The main conclusion was that over-representation of homozygous individuals may have a positive effect on hip and elbow conformation.Pedigree data of 13,339 border collie dog was collected along with canine hip dysplasia (CHD) and canine elbow dysplasia (CED) records (1352 CHD and 524 CED), and an inbreeding–purging (IP) model was created. Ancestral inbreeding coefficients were calculated by using a gene dropping simulation method with GRain 2.2 software. Cumulative logit models (CLM) for CHD and CED were fitted using a logit-link Poisson distribution and the classical (F_W), and ancestral inbreeding (F_BAL, F_KAL, and F_KAL_NEW) coefficients as linear regression coefficients. The effective population size was calculated from F_W and decreased in the examined period along with an increase of F_W; however, slight differences were found as a consequence of breeding dog imports. CHD values were lowered by the expansion of F_BAL, as the alleles had been inbred in the past. For CHD, signs of purging were obtained. There was a positive trend regarding the breeding activity (both sire and dam of the future litters should be screened and certified free from CHD and CED), as years of selection increased the frequency of alleles with favorable hip and elbow conformation. Division of the ancestral inbreeding coefficient showed that alleles that had been identical by descent (IBD) for the first time (F_KAL_NEW) had a negative effect on both traits, while F_KAL has shown favorable results for alleles IBD in past generations. Some authors had proven this phenomenon in captive populations or experimental conditions; however, no evidence of inbreeding purge has ever been described in dog populations. Despite the various breeding practices, it seems that alleles of these polygenic disorders could be successfully purged out of the population with long-term selection.

Highlights

  • Dog breeds had gone through several morphological and functional changes over the centuries as a result of selective breeding

  • Our results show that ancestral inbreeding coefficients had a positive effect on hip and elbow conformation; the genetic load was not completely excluded from the population

  • The decrease of effective population size points to a trend: that dog owners do not prefer to buy from registered breeders

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Summary

Introduction

Dog breeds had gone through several morphological and functional changes over the centuries as a result of selective breeding. While undesirable traits are eliminated from other agricultural species as breeding programs focus on production and longevity, selection in dog breeding concentrates on looking and behaving in certain ways [4] Alongside the transformation of breed functions (from working dogs to companion pets), lower within-breed heterogeneity and unhealthy anatomy leads to inherited disorders, which can be connected to breed standards highlighting show ring appearance. Some of these health problems are monogenic (produced by a single gene or allele); on the other hand, there are multifactorial traits that are influenced by genetic factors and the environment

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