...:: Canine Genetics ::...
Origins from a Genetic Perspective
Until recent discoveries in molecular genetics, it has often been the belief that the domestic dog was descended from the wolf, because of a long prehistory where domestic dogs and the gray wolf were not all that different in outward physical characteristics. Studies have indicated that dogs are the oldest domesticated species, and likely originated even well before their first appearance in the archeological record 15,000 years ago where, the initial change to the diagnostic phenotype of domestic dogs was perhaps due in part to selection pressures associated with the transition from hunter gatherer to more sedentary lifestyles.
Recent genetic analyses have also suggested that many modern dog breeds have a much more recent origin of less than 200 years ago. Dogs clearly have behaviors, phenotypes, and diseases that are not evident in their wild progenitors. Finally, in the more recent evolution of dog breeds, limited interbreeding has imposed a remarkable genetic structure such that nearly all breeds represent distinct genetic pools that can be divided into at least four distinct genetic groupings; Asian/Ancient, Herding, Hunting, and Mastiff. Perhaps surprisingly, the German Shepherd dog is genetically closer related to the Bullmastiff, Rottweiler, Bulldog, or Boxer in the "Mastiff" category, than the Akita, Alaskan Malamute, Siberian Husky of the "Ancient" group, the Belgian Sheepdog or Belgian Tervuren of the "Herding" group, or the Border Collie and Australian Shepherd of the "Hunting" group.
The diverse genetic origin of the domestic dog has likely involved multiple gray wolf populations from breed inception that were even at later times backcrossed with wolves throughout history. There are examples not so many generations back in today's Czech bred German shepherd bloodlines, as developed from the experiments of kennel "z Pohranicni straze" in Libejovice (south Bohemia), in an effort to improve health, resistance and hardiness in their bloodlines used for military service and the patrolling of borders. This resulted in a recently developed breed, the "Czechoslovakian wolfdog", which originated from the 1955 breeding of a carpathian wolf and German shepard, and subsequently backcrossed again to wolves on three additional occasions within a 25 year period.
This substantial input of variation from wild ancestors has provided the raw material for phenotypic change, but unique development and genetic mechanisms may also have assisted the course of artificial selection. The natural history of some breeds has further restricted their genetic diversity over what is expected from breeding strategies alone. Significant events in the last 100 years, such as wars and economic depressions contribute to reducing the genetic diversity of breeds by producing severe bottleneck conditions such as political or geographical isolation, at times having reduced the effective breeding stock of particular breeds to only a few dogs.
Genetic testing results also clearly show a sex bias in the origin of breeds. The breeding potential for males is much larger than that for females because a female will produce one or two litters per year, while a single male could father a large number of litters. With a smaller number of males than females being involved in the formation of most breeds, this drastically differs from the breeding patterns in wild gray wolf populations where both sexes have similar contributions. Diversity is therefore reduced by the presence of popular sires, in what is often called "popular sire syndrome" or "founders effect". These dogs have physical features that make them particularly successful in the show ring and hunting or sporting events, and as a result, they may produce over a 100 litters in their lifetime. Therefore many breeds of purebred dogs today represent a limited genetic pool, with disease predispositions that derive from one or a small number of recent genetic founders.
Dogs & Selective Breeding
A portion of a lecture at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute 2005 Holiday Lectures No rights or restrictions, streaming media, ~14.5min., ~25MB

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The Basics of Color
At each locus, a dog carries two genes, one from its sire and one from the dam.
Agouti locus order of dominance: Sable, Black & Tan, Bi-Color, then Black.
These genotypes (gene-pairs) produce these phenotypes (exhibited traits)...
a Sable gene (aw) + another gene = a Sable dog
a Black&Tan gene (as) + a Bi-Color gene (at) = a Black&Tan dog
a Black gene (a) + any other gene = a dog of the other color
A dog of this color (phenotype) can have these genes (genotype)...
Sable (aw)
aw+aw
aw+as
aw+at
aw+a
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Black & Tan (as)
as+as
as+at
as+a
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Bi-Color
at+at
at+a
|
Black (a)
a+a
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The Color Matrix
The table below is designed to illustrate the relative probability of color pattern in a litter when the two genotypes are mated.
The offspring genotype is in text, phenotype is color-highlited. White text signifies homogenous (same) genes.
Bracketed genotypes indicate a surfaced recessive phenotype in the offspring, different from those exhibited by it's parents.

Click
here for a printable version of this color chart.
Phenotype: The exhibited trait
Genotype: Phenotype and its recessive gene
White Lettering: Homogenous Traits (duplicate)
Black Lettering: Heterogenous Traits (differing)
[Brackets]: Progeny's phenotype is different from either parent's phenotype
Understanding
Linebreeding & Outcrossing
Linebreeding
Linebreeding can increase the possibility of
expression of undesireable, as well as, desirable genetic
characteristics. This is why it is very important to know and
understand the strengths and weaknesses of dogs before making a lot
of breeding decisions. Linebreeding/inbreeding "locks in"
characteristics by limiting the possible genes that the pups carry.
With inbreeding & close line breeding you normally can not expect
to produce anything better than what you start with (the parents).
You are breeding a much smaller subset of the GSD
gene pool. And you end up with dogs that have a greater chance of
being homozygous for many traits (carry two copies of the same gene,
rather than one each of the range of possiblities for THAT gene).
Equally as important if you are line breeding, you
also increase the chances that problem genes will be expressed in the
puppies. In long lines of strictly line bred animals there is an
increase in the chances for genes to mutate and be expressed.
Often in lines that are extensively linebred (nine
or more generations), there tends to become a decrease in the quality
of the line, due to the lack of genetic material to draw from. This
is known as inbreeding depression, and can result in decreased
fertility. This is part of the reason why very close breedings are
discouraged (brother to sister, father to daughter, mother to son).
These close breedings can and have been used to strengthen a trait,
but they are almost always followed with an outcross.
Line breeding is also useful in the bringing out of
recessive genes. It increases the chances that you will have both
genes be recessive in an offspring if the line is bred closely. Close
line breeding can become a crap shoot because you may end up with
something you don't want and then have to go more aggressively for
outcrossing to get rid of the trait.
Outcrossing
With outcrossing you have the chance to produce
something better than the parents. The phenomenon of "Hybrid
vigor" occurs when the puppies are better than the average of
the parents.
So, when you outcross, you are expanding the gene
pool again. There are two main results:
ONE: You cross two lines that have been bred for
most of the same traits and you get very similar traits, but possibly
improve on a trait your line is weak on. For example, if your line
has floppy ears and you outcross to a very similar line, but one with
good ears, you will keep the same "type", but have some
pups with better ears than your line has been producing.
TWO: If you breed to a line that has been breeding
for a different set of traits than your line, you will get a huge
variation in the trait that the pups express. You are, in essence,
doubling the possibilities for the traits of the pups. You will
probably end up with some great dogs and some horrible dogs, but
neither type will tend to be "prepotent", which means
"tends to reproduce like itself", because they will tend to
be heterozygous, having two different genes, rather than two copies
of the SAME possible gene, or homozygous.
If you want to suppress the expression of some
unwanted gene, you outcross. If you want to eliminate a trait,
inbreed to bring it to the surface and then remove the affected dogs
from the gene pool. The outcrossing works short-term but allows the
recessives to spread thru the genepool without anyone knowing who
carries it. This makes it more likely that it will become a
widespread problem in the breed. With the inbreeding, you see these
undesirable traits within a few generations and can quickly weed them
out. However, when you go back to an outside line, you run the risk
of bringing these recessives back into your line.
If you only outcross after outcross etc., and you
only use excellent examples for breeding, your going to be able to
find some excellent puppies in these litters. The problem is that the
line loses it's seperate identity quickly and hybrid vigor decreases
with each outcross.
Linebreeding & Outcrossing; in respect to both
Linebreeding is what provides for the outcrossing that equals hybrid vigor.


Line Breeding and outcrossing go hand-in-hand. One's
not much good without the other. Too much emphasis in either
direction will produce poor results.
With inbreeding or with outcrossing you can surface
the undesireable recessive traits. But unless both parents carry the
recessive, it may not reveal in the offspring, and some (about 25%)
of the pups produced by carriers bred to non-carriers will also be
carriers.
One way to test an animal for a recessive is to
breed it to a known carrier and see if any of the puppies produced
have the characteristic. The test breeding can be either an outcross
or inbreeding, it's irrelevant.
Taken from the Dr. Denny Article on the "Principles
of Genetics" part 1
"Hybrid vigor has occurred when the
performance of the offspring is different from that of the average of
their parents. The actual mechanism of hybrid vigor is not well
understood, however, matings can be made to increase the beneficial
effects of hybrid vigor. Mating of animals which are not alike in
their pedigree or that are not related are those which will generally
exhibit higher levels of hybrid vigor. Closely related animals do not
exhibit high levels of heterosis.
Crossbreeding in plants and animals is done to
take advantage of both hybrid vigor and complimentarity.
Complimentarity is the term used to describe the "combining"
of desirable traits from two breeds or lines that are not related.
Hybrid vigor is also maximized when animals are mated that have
little or no genetic history in common."
The best way to maximize Hybrid Vigor is to cross
two separate, unrelated linebred lines. Breeders would benefit to
keep their lines as seperate as possible from other lines, to ensure
that more lines are available for hybrid vigor.
No matter what you do you will be placing pets if
you breed. No matter if you linebreed or outcross. The balance is so
tricky that you generally only find 10-20% of progeny are really top
quality. When you add the problem of restricting your selection to
fewer dogs, you will make compromises to stay with in the line. This
is how problems tend to creep in. If you are looking at the ability
to make the selection from a wider variety of animals and select the
best from that pool you will see improvement.
In Summary
Line breeding has been a major problem driving the
decline of many breeds. That does not mean that outcrossing alone
becomes a sound breeding theory! It is not a question of line
breeding or outcrossing. It' a question of how to obtain
predictability, by taking advantage of both. Whether you are trying
to get rid of a genetic disorder, or you are just trying to put some
good litters on the ground, no matter the goal, a breeder won't make
any progress without taking advantage of predictability.

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