Ancient
DNA reveals history of horse domestication
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[December 16, 2014]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Speed, smarts,
and the heart of a champion: using genomic analysis, scientists have
identified DNA changes that helped turn ancient horses such as those in
prehistoric cave art into today's Secretariats and Black Beautys,
researchers reported Monday.
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Understanding the genetic changes involved in equine
domestication, which earlier research traced to the wind-swept
steppes of Eurasia 5,500 years ago, has long been high on the wish
list of evolutionary geneticists because of the important role that
taming wild horses played in the development of civilization.
Once merchants, soldiers and explorers could gallop rather than just
walk, it revolutionized trade, warfare, the movement of people and
the transmission of ideas. It also enabled the development of
continent-sized empires such as the Scythians 2,500 years ago in
what is now Iran.
It was all made possible by 125 genes, concluded the study in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Related to skeletal muscles, balance, coordination, and cardiac
strength, they produced traits so desirable that ancient breeders
selected horses for them, said geneticist Ludovic Orlando of the
Natural History Museum of Denmark, who led the study. The result was
generations of horses adapted for chariotry, pulling plows, and
racing.
Genes active in the brain also underwent selection. Variants linked
to social behavior, learning, fear response, and agreeableness are
all more abundant in domesticated horses.
The discovery of the genetic basis for horse domestication was a
long time coming because no wild descendants of ancient breeds
survive. The closest is the Przewalski's horse. By comparing
domesticated species to their wild relatives, scientists figured out
how organisms as different as rice, tomatoes and dogs became
domesticated.
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With no truly wild horses to study, Orlando's team examined DNA from
29 horse bones discovered in the Siberian permafrost and dating from
16,000 and 43,000 years ago, and compared it to DNA from five modern
domesticated breeds.
Some genes in today's horses were absent altogether from the ancient
ones, showing they arose from recent mutations. Among them: a
short-distance "speed gene" that propels every Kentucky Derby
winner.
Geneticists not involved in the study suggested that analyzing
equine DNA from around the time of domestication, rather than
millennia before, might show more clearly what genetic changes
occurred as horses were tamed.
"Comparing ancient genomes to modern genomes is tricky," said Arne
Ludwig of the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in
Berlin.
(Reporting by Sharon Begley; Editing by Grant McCool)
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