Popular Sire Syndrome
and Concerns of Genetic Diversity
Jerold Bell, DVM, Tufts University
There
is a tendency for breeders to breed to the male who is the top-winning dog. This
can also occur with a popular dog that has OFA excellent hip conformation, or has produced no epileptic offspring in matings
to epileptic dams. Regardless of the popularity of the breed, if a large portion
are breeding to a single stud dog, (the popular-sire syndrome), the gene pool will drift in that dog’s direction and
there will be a loss of genetic diversity. Too much breeding to one dog will
give the gene pool an extraordinary dose of his genes, and this will include whatever detrimental recessives he may carry,
to be uncovered in later generations. This can cause future breed related genetic
disease through what is known as the founder’s effect. This dog is one
that is seen in most pedigrees and causes decreased diversity and population bottlenecks.
This same effect can also be created by breeding the popular sire’s offspring.
Along
with the thrill of owning a popular sire, comes your responsibility to the breed. Over
time, you will find out what detrimental genes he carries. Hopefully these will
cause minor faults, but occasionally they may cause genetic disorders. The true
measure of a conscientious breeder is how this knowledge is disseminated to the owners of the next generation.
Purebred
dog breeds have closed studbooks. No new genes are available to the breed, except
from infrequent mutations that are usually not desirable. Considering a breed
as a whole, genes cannot be gained through selective breeding; they can only be lost.
This has led breeders to question whether a pure breed can go through hundreds of years of selective breeding and still
maintain its health and viability.
All
genes come in pairs: one from the sire and one from the dam. If both genes are
of the same type, the gene pair is homozygous. If the two are different, the
gene pair is heterozygous. While each dog can have a maximum of two different
genes in a pair, many different genes are potentially available to be part of the pair.
The greater the number of genes that are available to each pair, the greater the breed diversity.
Breeders
underestimate the amount of diversity that can be present in a breed; even one with a limited group of founders. A molecular genetic study of the Chinook dog breed, which was reduced to four dogs in the 1970s, showed
that there was significant gene diversity and heterozygosity in the breed.
The
studbook for the Thoroughbred horse has been closed for more than 300 years. However,
researchers have found that on average 63 percent of the variable gene pairs are heterozygous and that 4.7 genes are potentially
available to each pair. This diversity is present in spite of the fact that 95
percent of the breed traces back to a single founder male.
Some
breeders express concern that inbreeding depression may affect the viability of their breed.
The consequence of inbreeding depression is not due to a general effect from a high level of homozygous gene pairs. The problem that inbreeding depression causes in purebred populations, stems from
the effects of deleterious recessive genes. When homozygous, they cause impaired
health. Lethal recessives place a drain on the gene pool, through smaller litter
size or neonatal death. Other deleterious genes can cause disease or impair immunity. If there is no breed diversity in a gene pair, but the particular homozygote that
is present is not detrimental, there is no negative effect on health. The characteristics
that make a breed reproduce true to its standard are based on non-variable (homozygous) gene pairs.
The
Doberman Pinscher breed has a problem with von Willebrand’s disease; an autosomal recessive bleeding disorder Genetic testing has found that the defective gene is present in 77 percent of Dobermans. Doberman breeders can test and identify carrier and affected dogs.
They can decrease the defective gene’s frequency by breeding carriers to normal-testing dogs and selecting quality,
normal-testing offspring for breeding. By not just eliminating carriers, but
replacing them with their normal-testing offspring, genetic diversity will be preserved.
The
perceived problem of a limited gene pool has caused some breeders to discourage linebreeding and promote outbreeding in an
attempt to protect genetic diversity. However, it is a fallacy that each dog
must carry the diversity of the breed. Studies in genetic conservation and rare
breeds have shown that this practice actually contributes to the loss of genetic diversity.
By
uniformly crossing all “lines”, or families of dogs in a breed, you eliminate the differences between them, and
therefore the diversity between individuals. This practice in livestock breeding
has significantly reduced diversity and caused the loss of unique rare breeds. The
process of maintaining separate lines, with many breeders crossing between lines and breeding back as they see fit, maintains
diversity in the gene pool. It is the varied opinion of breeders as to what constitutes
the ideal dog, and their selection fo breeding stock that maintains breed diversity.
A
basic tenet of population genetics is that gene frequencies do not change from the parental generation to the offspring. The gene frequencies will remain the same regardless of the homozygosity or heterozygosity
of the parents, or whether the mating represents an instance of outbreeding, linebreeding, or inbreeding. If some breeders outbreed, and some linebreed to certain dogs that they favor while others linebreed to
other dogs that they favor, then breedwide genetic diversity is maintained.
The
loss of genes from a breed’s gene pool occurs through selection: the use and non-use of offspring. If a popular sire is used extensively, gene frequencies, and the gene pool can shift towards his genes,
limiting the breed’s genetic diversity. On the other hand, dogs that are
poor examples of a breed should not be used simply to maintain diversity. Related
dogs with desirable qualities will maintain diversity and improve the breed.
Breeders
should concentrate on selecting toward the breed standard, based on ideal temperament, performance, and conformation, and
should select against the significant breed-related health issues. If breeders
continually breed healthy, superior examples of their breed and avoid the popular-sire syndrome, the genetic health of the
breed can be maintained.
The
most important factor is not keeping breed-related health problems secret. If
kept secret, these issues will become so wide spread that there will be a loss of control over them. The goal of your breeding program is to maintain diversity and health.
AWS Partners’ recommended resources:
The Canine Diversity Project
http://www.canine-genetics.com
Canine
Genetic Diversity as a Common-Pool Resource
http://www.homestead.com/dogbreedersguild/files/cpr.htm
Interview:
Jerold S. Bell, DVM
http://www.borzoihealth.com/bellinterview.shtml
The Ins and Outs of Pedigree Analysis, Genetic Diversity, and Genetic
Disease Control
http://siriusdog.com/bell.htm
Genetics:
Do They Matter?
http://www.dogstuff.info/genetic_index.html
The
Genetic Gamble
http://www.purina.com/breeders/magazine.asp?article=178