Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Canine Cancer Man's best friend may be able to give us more than unconditional love. As this ScienCentral News video reports, mapping of the dog genome could shed new light on the cause of different cancers. Doggie DNA Man may have more in common with his best friend than the love of fresh air and a hearty meal. Dogs suffer from many of the same diseases that people do, including many different forms of cancer. " We see melanoma in these dogs, we see breast cancer, skin cancer, " says Elaine Ostrander, professor of genome sciences and zoology at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. " Really most of the things you're thinking about when you're thinking about your own health are things that you should be thinking about your dog's health as well. " That's because the dog's genetic make-up is so similar to our own. " The genome sequence of the dog and the genome sequence of humans differs by less than one or two percent, " says Ostrander. " So it's not surprising that the same genes are going to be responsible for cancer in dogs as are responsible in humans. And we know about one to three or one to four dogs will get cancer at some point in their lifetime, which is really the same rate that we see in humans. " But there's an important difference among dogs—breeding. There are over 300 different breeds of dog, and the pedigree of a purebred dog requires both of its parents to be of the same breed. This, and the fact that some dogs are the result of thousands of years of inbreeding, ensures that breeds are somewhat isolated genetically. By collecting and studying the DNA of different dog breeds, Ostrander and her team are finding out why certain dog breeds tend to get certain kinds of cancers. " What we are starting to observe is as we map a gene for a particular disease, even though it's fairly complex in the human population, [is that] in any given dog breed, we are seeing only one to two genes [that] are primarily responsible for that disease, and not the eight or nine or ten when we look in the much more complicated human population, " says Ostrander. In a study published in the journal Human Molecular Genetics, the scientists identified a single gene that causes an inherited form of kidney cancer in German shepherd dogs by studying a closely related group of dogs. " All of these dogs were integrated or cross related in some way, " explains Ostrander. " So we knew that whatever the reason was that these dogs were getting kidney cancer, it was probably due to a mutation in a single gene. That was one of the primary findings of the study—it was due to a mutation in a single gene. " The same gene in humans may cause human kidney cancer, showing that dog breeds could point out human disease genes. " The genes that we are going to find in dogs are really going to be important for human health and biology, " Ostrander says. Ostrander is always looking for different DNA samples from different breeds, so your dog could help with her research. One way the DNA is collected is by rubbing a cheek swab very quickly on the inside of a dog's cheek. " Then we put it in a particular preservative, " says Ostrander, " and then we can actually extract a couple of micrograms of DNA from that quick rubbing of the inside of the dog's cheek. It's completely painless. " The other way doggie DNA is collected is through blood samples. " If a dog has a veterinary visit anyway, we ask the dog owners to contact us and we'll send the veterinarian a tube with an anticoagulant in it, " says Ostrander. " Then the veterinarian can draw a blood sample and we could actually get a large amount of DNA from a blood sample. But we're happy to work with the dog owners either way. Some dog owners prefer to do just the cheek swab. And whatever they're most comfortable with is fine. " This research was funded by the American Cancer Society. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.