Starchy diet may have transformed
wolves to dogs
Canine cousins differ in genes related
to digestion
Even the most illustrious canine breeds can probably trace their
heritage to junkyard dogs.
That’s the conclusion of a new study aimed at finding the
genetic changes that transformed wild wolves into domesticated dogs.
Dogs can digest carbohydrates better than wolves can, and gaining
that ability may have been an important step in taming the animals,
evolutionary geneticist Erik Axelsson of Uppsala University in Sweden
and his colleagues report online January 23 in Nature. As
humans settled into farming communities, wolves may have given up
their meat-only diets to scavenge carbohydrate-rich food from garbage
dumps. Animals that could best make use of the starchy food may
gradually have morphed over generations into man’s best friend.
No one expected genes relating to digestion to be important for
dog domestication, says Elaine Ostrander, chief of the National Human
Genome Research Institute’s cancer genetics branch and an authority
on dog genetics. Researchers previously thought that when wolves
became domestic dogs, genes controlling behavior and the immune
system must have changed.
The new study focuses on genetic differences between 60 dogs
representing 14 breeds and 12 wolves from around the world. Those
changes, the researchers reasoned, could identify genes that were
important in separating dogs from wolves.
The researchers determined the genetic makeup of groups of dogs
and compared the results to those from wolves, concentrating on parts
of the genetic instruction book that differ between the two species.
As they had expected, the researchers uncovered differences in many
genes relating to the brain. But the search also revealed lots of
genes involved in starch digestion and metabolism, and in the use of
fats. Dogs, the team found, have more copies than wolves do of the
AMY2B gene, which produces an enzyme that breaks starch into
easily digestible sugars.
Other genetic variants seem to contribute to dogs’ increased
ability to convert a sugar called maltose to glucose, the sugar that
cells prefer to burn for energy. Yet other genetic changes improve
dogs’ ability to move glucose into their cells. Combined, the
tweaks alter dogs’ metabolism so they can get more energy out of a
carbohydrate-rich diet than wolves can, the researchers conclude. The
scientists confirmed the effect of the genetic variants by
identifying biochemical differences in starch metabolism in blood and
tissue samples from dogs and wolves.
“This is a profound adaptation that dogs have,” says UCLA
evolutionary biologist Robert Wayne. But he doesn’t think it was
the first step in domestication. Archaeological evidence suggests
that domesticated dogs have been around at least since 33,000 years
ago, a time when humans were still hunter-gatherers. The changes that
allow dogs to thrive on carbohydrates while wolves eat all meat
probably started with the establishment of agriculture about 10,000
years ago, and represent late steps in the domestication process,
Wayne says.
Both brain changes and dietary adaptations were probably necessary
for some wolves to be domesticated Axelsson says. Wolves that were
more tolerant to stress and that didn’t run and hide at the first
sign of a human would have been able to stick around garbage heaps
longer and eat their fill. And those that could extract more
nutrients from the plant material in early farmers’ trash would
have had an evolutionary advantage. The researchers are now
determining when and in what part of the world the adaptations likely
occurred, he says.
No comments:
Post a Comment