High anxiety about
genetic diseases comes with the territory
for anybody who is considered to be a
responsible breeder these days. In fact, if
you are breeding dogs, and you aren't
worried about genetic disease, you'd better
hold off on that next mating until you've
done your homework.
Canine geneticists
estimate that the average purebred dog is
carrying at least 4-5 defective genes. To
put it another way, when you are looking at
that gorgeous champion with normal hips you
are also looking at a dog who is carrying
the genes that can cause several types of
genetic disease.
And unless his
owner has a detailed genetic pedigree on
this dog, you have no way of knowing what
those disease genes are.
That champion may
be carrying a recessive gene for PRA, and if
he's bred with a bitch who is also carrying
the PRA gene, the disease will show up in
the puppies.
And even though he
has normal hips, he may be carrying some of
the recessive genes involved in hip
dysphasia. If you mate him with a bitch who
is normal but also carrying recessive genes
for dysphasia, you'll suddenly find
yourself, heartbroken and bewildered, with
dysplastic puppies.
"I'm not worried,"
you may say, " because soon we'll have DNA
tests that will solve these problems."
That's all well and
good if researchers have developed a test
for the single gene disease your line is
troubled by. But if that test doesn't exist,
are you willing to wait five or ten years
for your turn to come? And that's assuming
you'll persevere as a breeder beyond the
six-year average when most people give up,
often because they can't seem to stop
producing puppies with genetic diseases.
Of course, we are
only talking about tests for single gene
diseases. Most of the severe diseases like
hip and elbow dysplasia, cancer and
epilepsy, are polygenic, caused by the
complex interplay of many genes, and no
researchers have come close to developing a
polygenic gene test.
Are you willing to
wait 20 years for a gene test for hip
dysplasia? Are you willing to watch another
30 years go by with no significant decrease
in hip dysplasia among purebred dogs?
Breeders in Sweden
in 1976 weren't willing to wait, and so they
set up an open registry and started
screening all their dogs. By 1989 they had
achieved a 50 percent decrease in moderate
to severe hip dysplasia in almost all breeds
("Breeding Healthier Dogs in Sweden": Ake
Hedhammar, Tijdschrift voor Diergeneeskunde,
April 1991).
What is the secret
of this astonishing success? Nothing more
profound than the fact that each breeder
made it his or her business to find out
where the carriers and affecteds were in a
dog's close family - siblings, half-sibs,
offspring, parents and parents' siblings.
Using relatively simple methods, they could
then predict the risk of inheritance of
defective genes in any mating.
A few breed clubs
in the US have shown similar successes with
targeted genetic diseases. But the majority
of our purebred dog breeders, and the major
institutions that support them such as AKC
and OFA, have shown little or no interest in
using open registries combined with proven
breeding methods to reduce genetic diseases.
Times are changing,
however. In 1990 GDC (Institute for Genetic
Disease Control in Animals,
www.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/gdc/gdc.htm)
established an international all-breed open
registry based on the success of the Swedish
model. In the following decade thousands of
breeders began to register their dogs and to
make breeding decisions in accord with the
knowledge of where the carriers and
affecteds were in a particular dog's family.
Recently, GDC
started an advocacy campaign to call for the
widespread use of open registries and
appropriate breeding methods. The strong
response they are getting from breeders
throughout the purebred community confirms
that the demand for open registries is
increasing rapidly.
But the reality is
that no open registry, whether it is the
international GDC registry, or an open
registry set up by a breed club, can be
useful until it contains significant number
of dogs registered in close family groups.
Detractors of the open registry concept
point to this weakness but ignore the fact
that even without enough information in an
open registry, breeders can still make
progress against genetic disease by doing
the legwork themselves.
What can you do?
- Register your
dogs in an open registry and urge every
breeder you know to register also.
- Do whatever
you have to do to find out where
affecteds and carriers are among a dog's
siblings, offspring and other close
relatives.
- Don't breed to
a dog whose owner will not supply that
information.
- Screen as many
of your own dogs as possible, and supply
that information to buyers and breeders.
- Contact your
breed's health committee, the AKC and
OFA and strongly urge them to actively
promote the use of open registries.
Reprinted with
permision.