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Sniffing Out Cancer In Dogs and People

Geneticists and Veterinary Oncologists Rely on Dogs to Study Cancers in Pe

October 1, 2011

Geneticists and veterinary oncologists are using purebred dogs to study cancer in people. Dogs are prone to the same types of cancers that humans get, and canine cancer is caused by the same types of genetic problems. Because purebreds have a narrower window for genetic variation, it is easier to identify abnormal genes associated with cancer in their DNA compared to other types of dogs. Researchers are studying thousands of canine DNA samples donated by dog owners in their quest for new cancer treatments.

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HOW CAN DOG GENES HELP HUMANS? Scientists have successfully sequenced the entire genomic structures of two dog breeds: the boxer and the poodle. This is a major step forward for research in such fields as veterinary medicine. Extending this work to the human genome could help doctors better understand and fight human diseases and illnesses, including cancer research. In the study, scientists at the Institute for Genomic Research found distinct genetic differences between boxer and poodle dog breeds, and went on to compare those variations in the genomes from nine other breeds, as well as the genomes from four types of wolves and a coyote. They did this by tracking short stretches of DNA that occur randomly, called short interspersed elements (SINEs), which often turn the expression of those genes up, down or even off. Ultimately they found that the overall dog population contains at least 20,000 differences. For genomics researchers, variable SINEs can act as signposts for specific genes linked to a disease or traits. Identifying those genes is easier to do in dogs because they have been selectively bred for so long, creating the highest degree of physical and behavioral differences seen within a species. A dog genome is estimated to include 19,300 genes, and nearly all of them correspond to similar human genes. Specific breeds are predisposed, for instance, to heart disease, cancer, blindness, deafness, and other common disorders. A second study documented many of those disease-related differences.

The Biophysical Society contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

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To Go Inside This Science: 

Matthew Breen, PhD
Professor of Genomics
Dept. of Molecular Biomedical Sciences
College of Veterinary Medicine
North Carolina State University

Ellen Weiss
Biophysical Society
Phone:  240-290-5606


© 2011 American Institute of Physics