Back Arctic-adapted Dogs Emerged at the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition

Arctic-adapted Dogs Emerged at the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition

06.06.2021

 

Sinding MS*, Gopalakrishnan S*, Ramos-Madrigal J*, de Manuel M*, Pitulko VV, Kuderna L, Feuerborn TR, Frantz LAF, Vieira FG, Niemann J, Samaniego Castruita JA, Carøe C, Andersen-Ranberg EU, Jordan PD, Pavlova EY, Nikolskiy PA, Kasparov AK, Ivanova VV, Willerslev E, Skoglund P, Fredholm M, Wennerberg SE, Heide-Jørgensen MP, Dietz R, Sonne C, Meldgaard M, Dalén L, Larson G, Petersen B, Sicheritz-Pontén T, Bachmann L, Wiig Ø, Tomas Marques-Bonet+, Hansen AJ+, Gilbert MTP+. “Arctic-adapted Dogs Emerged at the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition” Science. 2020 Jun 26;368(6498):1495-1499. doi: 10.1126/science.aaz8599.

Abstract

Although sled dogs are one of the most specialized groups of dogs, their origin and evolution has received much less attention than many other dog groups. We applied a genomic approach to investigate their spatiotemporal emergence by sequencing the genomes of 10 modern Greenland sled dogs, an ~9500-year-old Siberian dog associated with archaeological evidence for sled technology, and an ~33,000-year-old Siberian wolf. We found noteworthy genetic similarity between the ancient dog and modern sled dogs. We detected gene flow from Pleistocene Siberian wolves, but not modern American wolves, to present-day sled dogs. The results indicate that the major ancestry of modern sled dogs traces back to Siberia, where sled dog–specific haplotypes of genes that potentially relate to Arctic adaptation were established by 9500 years ago.

 

Arctic-adapted gogs emerged at the Pleistocene-Holocene transition. 

 

 

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