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      Effects of Long-Term Selection in the Border Collie Dog Breed: Inbreeding Purge of Canine Hip and Elbow Dysplasia

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          Abstract

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          For dog breeders, health is one of the main criteria when choosing a breeding animal; thus, selection for good anatomy is the key to reduce orthopedic disorders. In many dog breeds, radiographic screening for canine hip and elbow dysplasia is a compulsory test for breeding; however, these multifactorial traits are determined by genetic and environmental factors. Therefore, it is extremely difficult to eliminate these disorders from the population. In natural selection, such traits can be “purged” out of the population with inbreeding. The study aimed to examine the inbreeding-purge of canine hip and elbow dysplasia in the border collie breed. The main conclusion was that over-representation of homozygous individuals may have a positive effect on hip and elbow conformation.

          Abstract

          Pedigree data of 13,339 border collie dog was collected along with canine hip dysplasia (CHD) and canine elbow dysplasia (CED) records (1352 CHD and 524 CED), and an inbreeding–purging (IP) model was created. Ancestral inbreeding coefficients were calculated by using a gene dropping simulation method with GRain 2.2 software. Cumulative logit models (CLM) for CHD and CED were fitted using a logit-link Poisson distribution and the classical (F_ W), and ancestral inbreeding (F_ BAL, F_ KAL, and F_ KAL_NEW) coefficients as linear regression coefficients. The effective population size was calculated from F_ W and decreased in the examined period along with an increase of F_ W; however, slight differences were found as a consequence of breeding dog imports. CHD values were lowered by the expansion of F_ BAL, as the alleles had been inbred in the past. For CHD, signs of purging were obtained. There was a positive trend regarding the breeding activity (both sire and dam of the future litters should be screened and certified free from CHD and CED), as years of selection increased the frequency of alleles with favorable hip and elbow conformation. Division of the ancestral inbreeding coefficient showed that alleles that had been identical by descent (IBD) for the first time (F_ KAL_NEW) had a negative effect on both traits, while F_ KAL has shown favorable results for alleles IBD in past generations. Some authors had proven this phenomenon in captive populations or experimental conditions; however, no evidence of inbreeding purge has ever been described in dog populations. Despite the various breeding practices, it seems that alleles of these polygenic disorders could be successfully purged out of the population with long-term selection.

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          Coefficients of Inbreeding and Relationship

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            Genetics in conservation management: Revised recommendations for the 50/500 rules, Red List criteria and population viability analyses

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              An investigation of inbreeding depression and purging in captive pedigreed populations.

              We use regression models to investigate the effects of inbreeding in 119 zoo populations, encompassing 88 species of mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians. Meta-analyses show that inbreeding depression for neonatal survival was significant across the 119 populations although the severity of inbreeding depression appears to vary among taxa. However, few predictors of a population's response to inbreeding are found reliable. The models are most likely to detect inbreeding depression in large populations, that is, in populations in which their statistical power is maximised. Purging was found to be significant in 14 populations and a significant trend of purging was found across populations. The change in inbreeding depression due to purging averaged across the 119 populations is <1%, however, suggesting that the fitness benefits of purging are rarely appreciable. The study re-emphasises the necessity to avoid inbreeding in captive breeding programmes and shows that purging cannot be relied upon to remove deleterious alleles from zoo populations.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Animals (Basel)
                Animals (Basel)
                animals
                Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI
                MDPI
                2076-2615
                25 September 2020
                October 2020
                : 10
                : 10
                : 1743
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Animal Nutrition, Szent István University Kaposvár Campus, 40, Guba S. str., H-7400 Kaposvár, Hungary
                [2 ]Department of Mathematics and Informatics, Szent István University Kaposvár Campus, 40, Guba S. str., H-7400 Kaposvár, Hungary; kover.gyorgy@ 123456ke.hu (G.K.); farkas.janos@ 123456ke.hu (J.F.)
                [3 ]Department of Hippology, Szent István University Kaposvár Campus, 40, Guba S. str., H-7400 Kaposvár, Hungary; bokor.arpad@ 123456ke.hu
                [4 ]Department of Animal Science, Szent István University Kaposvár Campus, 40, Guba S. str., H-7400 Kaposvár, Hungary; nagy.istvan@ 123456ke.hu
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: acs.virag@ 123456szie.hu
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5427-972X
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0247-6638
                Article
                animals-10-01743
                10.3390/ani10101743
                7601391
                32992858
                3c44c5dc-d874-48b3-84cf-8dab954fa5cb
                © 2020 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 31 July 2020
                : 23 September 2020
                Categories
                Article

                border collie,inbreeding,purging,hip dysplasia,elbow dysplasia

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