| Literature DB >> 25331973 |
K M Summers1, R Ogden2, D N Clements1, A T French3, A G Gow1, R Powell4, B Corcoran1, R J Mellanby1, J P Schoeman5.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Dogs; Genetics; Inherited disease
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25331973 PMCID: PMC4283627 DOI: 10.1136/vr.102739
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Rec ISSN: 0042-4900 Impact factor: 2.695
Estimated heterozygosities (HE)and genetic distances (FST) for South African dogs
| Breed | HE* | FST* with | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jack Russell terrier | Labrador retriever | ||
| Jack Russell terrier | 0.76 (0.76) | ||
| Labrador retriever | 0.68 (0.68) | 0.042 (0.064) | |
| German shepherd dog | 0.57 (0.54) | 0.087 (0.153) | 0.106 (0.201) |
HE is a measure of the genetic diversity in the population; a high HE value indicates that many individuals are heterozygous at many loci, consistent with a low level of inbreeding. FST is an estimate of the genetic differentiation between two populations. A high value indicates that the two populations are genetically isolated. Values were calculated using the programme GENALEX (Peakall and Smouse 2006).
*Values in brackets for UK dogs (from Mellanby and others 2013).
FIG 1:STRUCTURE analysis of three dog breeds from the UK and South Africa. Genotypes for 15 microsatellites for dogs of all three breeds from South Africa and the UK were entered into the program STRUCTURE and the analysis run with a burn-in period of 100,000 replications and a run of 500,000 replications (Mellanby and others 2013). Runs were repeated between two and five times for each value of K to assess the stability of the population structure detected. The results are shown for a typical run with K=6. Each vertical column represents a different dog, whereas the shades of grey represent six different subpopulations in the admixture. The y axis shows the proportional of the genotype attributed to each subpopulation for each dog
FIG 2:STRUCTURE analysis within dog breeds from the UK and South Africa. The input data were the same as for Fig 1, but the input contained only the results for a single breed. Burn-in, run and replications were the same as for Fig 1. Results are shown for K=2. The relative proportion of each population in each dog is shown in dark and light grey.; the outcome was similar for higher values of K