Scientists said they had laid bare
the genetic code of the pig, revealing that besides providing ham, bacon and
sausages, the domestic swine may also be useful in fighting human diseases.
Pigs and humans share 112 DNA
mutations which in man have been linked to obesity, diabetes, dyslexia,
Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, a team from the United States and Europe found.
“We have the chance to study (in pigs)
how these genes interact with others to cause obesity, diabetes or other
diseases,” Denis Milan, Head of Animal Genetics at France’s National Institute
for Agricultural Research (INRA), told AFP yesterday.
“This suggests that for some
studies, including testing drugs and therapies, pigs may be a useful model for
predicting outcomes in humans,” added Co-Author Alan Archibald from the
University of Edinburgh.
The domestic pig, Sus scrofa
domesticus, is already used extensively in medical research, due to its
anatomical similarity to humans.
Pig heart valves are being used by
surgeons to replace faulty human ones.
“Now we can use pigs for looking at
genetic diseases” as well, said co-author Lawrence Schook from the University
of Illinois.
This could include “making
genetically modified animals to create human disease models”.
The sequencing of the genome also
holds promise for improvements in the pig’s more traditional role since being
domesticated over 10,000 years ago — that of serving as dinner.
Scientists
now have more tools at their disposal to breed a new generation of super-pigs
that will yield more meat for less feed, bear more piglets and resist disease
better.
The team has developed a test with
which they can identify individual pigs with a genetic predisposition to
growing fat fast, survive long and bear many offspring.
The sequencing project, which saw
the domestic pig’s genome compared to that of the wild boar, human, mouse, dog,
horse and cow, also revealed a “clear” genetic distinction between European and
Asian pigs.
The ancestor of the domestic pig,
which resembles today’s wild boar, first emerged in Southeast Asia and migrated
across Eurasia.
The two groups were separated for
so long, including by ice ages, that they became almost sub-species.
The findings add to evidence “that
pigs were independently domesticated in western Eurasia and East Asia”, the
authors wrote in the paper published in the journal Nature.
They also found that of the species
examined, pigs had the most olfactory receptor genes — underlining the
importance of smell in the scavenger animal’s lifestyle.
The swine also had fewer bitter
taste receptors, meaning that “pigs can eat food that is unpalatable to humans”
— another reason they have become such a highly valued farm animal.
Keywords:
Genetic code Pig, ham, bacon, sausages, 112 DNA mutations, obesity, diabetes,
dyslexia, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer's Disease, Denis Milan, Head of Animal
Genetics, France’s National Institute for Agricultural Research, Co-Author Alan
Archibald, University of Edinburgh, Sus scrofa domesticus, medical research,
Lawrence School, University of Illinois, super-pigs, Southeast Asia, Eurasia,
Nature,
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