From Wolves to Dogs, and Back: Genetic Composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.

The Czechoslovakian Wolfdog is a unique dog breed that originated from hybridization between German Shepherds and wild Carpathian wolves in the 1950s as a military experiment. This breed was used for guarding the Czechoslovakian borders during the cold war and is currently kept by civilian breeders...

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Main Authors: Milena Smetanová, Barbora Černá Bolfíková, Ettore Randi, Romolo Caniglia, Elena Fabbri, Marco Galaverni, Miroslav Kutal, Pavel Hulva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143807
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spelling doaj-b2cca93b1a804d818108c0ad8df5dd6d2021-03-03T19:57:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011012e014380710.1371/journal.pone.0143807From Wolves to Dogs, and Back: Genetic Composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.Milena SmetanováBarbora Černá BolfíkováEttore RandiRomolo CanigliaElena FabbriMarco GalaverniMiroslav KutalPavel HulvaThe Czechoslovakian Wolfdog is a unique dog breed that originated from hybridization between German Shepherds and wild Carpathian wolves in the 1950s as a military experiment. This breed was used for guarding the Czechoslovakian borders during the cold war and is currently kept by civilian breeders all round the world. The aim of our study was to characterize, for the first time, the genetic composition of this breed in relation to its known source populations. We sequenced the hypervariable part of the mtDNA control region and genotyped the Amelogenin gene, four sex-linked microsatellites and 39 autosomal microsatellites in 79 Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs, 20 German Shepherds and 28 Carpathian wolves. We performed a range of population genetic analyses based on both empirical and simulated data. Only two mtDNA and two Y-linked haplotypes were found in Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs. Both mtDNA haplotypes were of domestic origin, while only one of the Y-haplotypes was shared with German Shepherds and the other was unique to Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs. The observed inbreeding coefficient was low despite the small effective population size of the breed, possibly due to heterozygote advantages determined by introgression of wolf alleles. Moreover, Czechoslovakian Wolfdog genotypes were distinct from both parental populations, indicating the role of founder effect, drift and/or genetic hitchhiking. The results revealed the peculiar genetic composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog, showing a limited introgression of wolf alleles within a higher proportion of the dog genome, consistent with the reiterated backcrossing used in the pedigree. Artificial selection aiming to keep wolf-like phenotypes but dog-like behavior resulted in a distinctive genetic composition of Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs, which provides a unique example to study the interactions between dog and wolf genomes.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143807
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Milena Smetanová
Barbora Černá Bolfíková
Ettore Randi
Romolo Caniglia
Elena Fabbri
Marco Galaverni
Miroslav Kutal
Pavel Hulva
spellingShingle Milena Smetanová
Barbora Černá Bolfíková
Ettore Randi
Romolo Caniglia
Elena Fabbri
Marco Galaverni
Miroslav Kutal
Pavel Hulva
From Wolves to Dogs, and Back: Genetic Composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Milena Smetanová
Barbora Černá Bolfíková
Ettore Randi
Romolo Caniglia
Elena Fabbri
Marco Galaverni
Miroslav Kutal
Pavel Hulva
author_sort Milena Smetanová
title From Wolves to Dogs, and Back: Genetic Composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.
title_short From Wolves to Dogs, and Back: Genetic Composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.
title_full From Wolves to Dogs, and Back: Genetic Composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.
title_fullStr From Wolves to Dogs, and Back: Genetic Composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.
title_full_unstemmed From Wolves to Dogs, and Back: Genetic Composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.
title_sort from wolves to dogs, and back: genetic composition of the czechoslovakian wolfdog.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The Czechoslovakian Wolfdog is a unique dog breed that originated from hybridization between German Shepherds and wild Carpathian wolves in the 1950s as a military experiment. This breed was used for guarding the Czechoslovakian borders during the cold war and is currently kept by civilian breeders all round the world. The aim of our study was to characterize, for the first time, the genetic composition of this breed in relation to its known source populations. We sequenced the hypervariable part of the mtDNA control region and genotyped the Amelogenin gene, four sex-linked microsatellites and 39 autosomal microsatellites in 79 Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs, 20 German Shepherds and 28 Carpathian wolves. We performed a range of population genetic analyses based on both empirical and simulated data. Only two mtDNA and two Y-linked haplotypes were found in Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs. Both mtDNA haplotypes were of domestic origin, while only one of the Y-haplotypes was shared with German Shepherds and the other was unique to Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs. The observed inbreeding coefficient was low despite the small effective population size of the breed, possibly due to heterozygote advantages determined by introgression of wolf alleles. Moreover, Czechoslovakian Wolfdog genotypes were distinct from both parental populations, indicating the role of founder effect, drift and/or genetic hitchhiking. The results revealed the peculiar genetic composition of the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog, showing a limited introgression of wolf alleles within a higher proportion of the dog genome, consistent with the reiterated backcrossing used in the pedigree. Artificial selection aiming to keep wolf-like phenotypes but dog-like behavior resulted in a distinctive genetic composition of Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs, which provides a unique example to study the interactions between dog and wolf genomes.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143807
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