New York Times - April 5, 2007
Chihuahua or Great Dane? One Gene Sets Dog Size
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
If it weren’t for IGF-1, Paris Hilton’s life would be a lot less
elegant.
She’d be lugging around an Irish wolfhound in her purse.
Scientists have just discovered which gene fragment controls the
size of dogs, which have the greatest size range of any mammal — no
other species produces adults with 100-fold differences, like that
between a two-pound chihuahua and a 200-pound Newfoundland.
In a study to be published tomorrow in the journal Science,
researchers analyzed 3,241 purebred dogs from 143 breeds.
Genetically, the yapper arguing with your ankle is almost identical
to the drooling behemoth bred to hunt bears, except for a tiny bit
of DNA that suppresses the “insulin-like growth factor 1” gene.
Dog breeders have unwittingly been selecting for it since the last
Ice Age. Dogs emerged from the wolf about 15,000 years ago, and as
far back as 10,000 years ago, domesticated dogs as big as mastiffs
and as small as Jack Russell terriers were trotting the earth.
The study’s lead author, Elaine A. Ostrander, chief of cancer
genetics at the National Human Genome Research Institute, said she
visited a lot of dog shows, asking for blood.
“It became kind of a status symbol to participate, and we were
inundated,” she said. “I only wanted one sample from any descendant
of one grandfather, and owners would show up with five Scottish
deerhounds, all of them siblings, and say ‘oh, absolutely, they all
want to be in.’”
Making it “cool biology,” she said, is that the same gene suppressor
is found in both mice and men, creating mini-mice and suspected in
human dwarfism.
And because it controls growth gone awry, she said, it will help
cancer research, and is to be planted in mice.
But carefully: A mouse the size of a Great Dane, she said, “would be
a little scary, wouldn’t it?”