BREEDING
SCHEMES
by John Armstrong
Breeders often talk about inbreeding and outcrossing as though they were the only possibilities --
and generally with negative comments about the latter. There are other
possibilities, and I have long been a proponent of assortative
mating. It is not a theoretical concept that doesn't work in practice; I know
several breeders who do it and achieve good results. This essay will attempt to
explain why it is a good idea, but first I need to define the alternatives.
Random Mating
Though random mating is not a common breeding
practice, understanding what this implies is important. Random mating is
exactly what the name implies: mates are chosen with no regard for similarity
or relatedness. (If the population is inbred to some extent, randomly-selected
mates may be related.)
Random
mating is one of the assumptions behind the Hardy-Weinberg formula,
which allows one to calculate the frequency of heterozygous carriers from the
frequency of individuals expressing some recessive trait in a population.
Because inbreeding among purebred dogs and in other small populations decreases
the frequency of heterozygotes, these estimates may
be higher than the actual incidence.
Inbreeding and Linebreeding
Inbreeding is the practice of breeding two animals
that are related (i.e., have one or more common ancestors). The degree of
inbreeding may be assigned a value between 0 and 1, called the inbreeding
coefficient[1],
where 0 indicates that the animals have no common ancestors. Because the number
of ancestors potentially doubles with every generation you go back in a
pedigree, you eventually get to a point, even in a very large population, where
there are simply not enough ancestors. Thus, all populations are inbred to some
degree, and a true outcross (the term generally used when two animals
are "unrelated") is not really possible. The term is generally
misused to describe a cross between two animals with different phenotypes.
In a
population with a limited number of founders, a maximum number of ancestors --
the effective population size -- is reached in some past generation.
This number will be governed by various factors, such as the total population
size, how far individuals travel during their lifetime, and whether there are
inbreeding taboos or other mechanisms that reduce the likelihood of close
relatives mating.
Inbreeding
does not change allele frequencies directly, but it does increase the
proportion of homozygotes. Individuals homozygous for
deleterious genes are likely to be removed from the breeding pool by natural
selection (if they do not survive to reproductive age) or by man.
Linebreeding is merely a term used for a particular
type of inbreeding that often focusses on one
ancestor who was considered exceptional. Particularly if it is a male, this
exceptional ancestor may end up as grandfather and great-grandfather --
sometimes more than once -- in the same pedigree. Father-daughter, mother-son,
and some other combinations also result in a disproportionate number of genes
coming from a single ancestor. This type of close inbreeding is less
common. [In contrast, the mating of full sibs or first cousins doubles up on
two ancestors equally.]
As
the result of several common practices, most pure-bred domestic animals are
more inbred than they really need to be. One is that some breeders own a small
number of animals and breed only within their own group. A second is that many
breeders have the idea that outstanding animals can be produced by inbreeding
-- by doubling up on the good alleles while somehow avoiding the bad. Even if
you were to point out that this is a gamble, such breeders might respond that
they are simply helping natural selection.
Beyond
the conventional close-relative inbreeding, there is another practice that has
much the same effect, namely the popular sire phenomenon (generally
over-use of a well-promoted champion). In fact, many who breed to such a dog
believe they are doing a "good thing," as they will be increasing the
frequency of occurrence of the genes that made him a champion. What they may
not realize is that they are increasing the frequency of all genes carried
by this animal -- whether they are good, bad, or innocuous -- and that
champions, like any other animal, carry a number of undesirable recessive
alleles (the genetic load[2] )
that are masked by wild-type alleles. The result of the popular sire phenomenon
is that almost all members of the breed will carry a little bit of Jake Hugelberg, and any undesirable trait carried by Jake will
no longer be rare. Finding a safe, unrelated mate then becomes an exercise in
futility.
If we
lived in a world where all the genes followed the simple rule that there may
only be good alleles, which are dominant, and bad alleles, which are recessive,
then inbreeding could be an effective tool for improving a breed. However,
during the past 25 years, geneticists have been directly measuring genetic
diversity in populations by looking at the DNA or proteins, rather than at the
phenotype. They have found that many individuals who cannot easily be
distinguished by their phenotypic appearance nevertheless have considerable
differences in their genotype. Some of these alternative alleles (termed
neutral isoalleles) are functionally equivalent.
Others have lost only a small portion of their normal function.
Suppose
we have a "mutant" allele that has lost only 5-10% of its normal
function. In many cases, this would not produce a noticeable effect. If you
made an individual homozygous for this allele, you would not even be aware that
you had done so. Now consider that the same fate may befall a number of genes
during an inbreeding program. Eventually, you will have an individual that is
considerably less fit than one carrying the normal alleles for all (or even
most of) these genes. There is no magic formula for regaining what you have
lost. You must start again.
[Sometimes
mutant alleles result in an even more dramatic loss of function, but remain
undiscovered under normal conditions. A good example is vWD
in Dobermans.]
About
the only animals that are routinely inbred to a high level are laboratory mice
and rats. There, the breeders start breeding many lines simultaneously in the
expectation that the majority will die out or will suffer significant inbreeding
depression, which generally means that they are smaller, produce fewer
offspring, are more susceptible to disease, and have a shorter average
lifespan. Dogs are no different. If you can start with enough lines, a few may
make it through the genetic bottleneck with acceptable fitness. However,
dog breeders generally don't have the resources to start several dozen or more
lines simultaneously.
Sometimes
two different alleles may be better than one. Consider the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). These genes are
responsible for distinguishing "self" from "foreign", and a
heterozygous individual can recognize more possibilities than a homozygous one.
Having a variety of MHC alleles is even more important to population survival.
Not only does this provide better defense against
pathogens, but there is growing evidence that parents who carry different MHC haplotypes may have fewer fertility problems. This is not a
universally accepted theory, but today one is hard pressed to find a
conservation or zoo biologist concerned with preserving an endangered species
who would not list maintaining maximum genetic diversity as one of his/her
primary goals.
Assortative Mating
Assortative
mating is the mating of individuals that are phenotypically similar. It is a normal practice, to some
degree, for humans and various other species. Though phenotype is a product of
both genotype and environment, such individuals are more likely to carry the
same alleles for genes determining morphology. If we are talking about a
conformation that is basically sound from the structural point of view, the
genes involved will have been subjected to natural selection for thousands of
years and will most likely be dominant. The major characteristics that set one
breed apart from another will likely have been fixed early in the
breed's history. ("Fixed" means that there is only one allele of
present in the population. If there is only one allele, the question of
dominance does not arise.) Consequently, when you look at a dog, you are
looking at his genes. If the conformation (or, for that matter, the
temperament, intelligence, or whatever) is not good, then you are very likely
looking at a dog or a breed that is homozygous for one or more recessive
alleles that you would probably like to get rid of. If it is the dog and not
the breed, you may elect not to breed him, or you may look for a mate that
covers the problem. If it is the breed, the only solution would be to introduce
some genes from another breed. (That would be an outcross!)
Breeding
together animals that share dominant good alleles for most of their genes will
produce mainly puppies that also carry these genes. Even if the parents are not
homozygous for all these good alleles, you should still get many that are
suitable. More important, if animals heterozygous for certain genes are more
fit, assortative mating will preserve more heterozygosity than inbreeding. However, unlike inbreeding,
assortative mating should not result in an increased
risk of the parents sharing hidden recessive mutations. Though we might like to
eliminate deleterious recessives, everyone carries a few. Trying to find the
"perfect dog" without either visible or hidden flaws is like betting
on the lottery. There may conceivably be a big winner out there, but they are
certainly not common.
The more you try to cover the deficiencies in one
dog with good qualities in another, the less the dogs will have in common. If,
then, the results are unsatisfactory, they should not be blamed on assortative mating, as that is no longer what you are doing.
|
The risks involved Some
trait that breeders consider desirable could be the result of homozygosity for a recessive allele for gene A or gene B.
Obviously, crossing an AAbb with an aaBB will produce AaBb
progeny that will not express this trait. (However, aside from some of the
genes affecting coat color, I can think of no
examples.) If
care is not taken to go back far enough in the pedigrees, you may have two
animals with similar phenotypes resulting from common ancestry. Whether you
are inbreeding unintentionally or intentionally, the consequences are the
same. The solution is simple: check the heritage. Because
assortative mating involves selection (you are
hopefully mating the best together, and not the worst), you are denying some
dogs the opportunity to pass their genes on to the next generation. This is,
perhaps, the subtlest of risks, as it does not seem to involve doing anything
"wrong." Most would argue that it is merely doing what nature does
-- eliminating the least fit. But what if some of these "less-than-best"
happen to be the only ones to carry the best allele for some gene? Out goes
the good with the bad! This is primarily a "low-numbers" risk.
The larger the population, the less likely we are to find that important alleles
are carried by only a few individuals. However, it pays to know where the
diversity lies. Do any of you know which, among the current dogs, are most
likely to carry the genes of any given founder? |
[1] Inbreeding
calculations do not
account for the possibility that an allele will become homozygous by
"chance," though this, too, can be calculated if the frequency at
which an allele occurs in the whole population is known. Most basic Genetics
texts explain how. (See, for example, Willis, pp. 293-295, "The
Hardy-Weinberg Law.")
2 I have seen figures of 2500 genetic diseases in man
and there are likely to be as many in Canis familiaris, taken as a whole. In man. the vast majority are rare (allele
frequencies of < 0.01, which means < 1 in 1000 affected). However,
everyone carries three to five "lethal equivalents." This is their
"genetic load." Canine
breeds are often established with a handful of founders, so we end up with a
subset of one or two dozen problems, at frequencies at least 10-fold higher.
[If we had five founders, each with a unique set of problems carried as single
recessive alleles, the allele frequency of each will initially be ~ 0.1 and ~
1% will be affected.
Copyright 1997,
1998, 2001 John B. Armstrong. The Canine Diversity Project. All rights
reserved. Reprinted with permission.
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