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Genomic Study Links Whorls and Behavior in Horses

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Topic: Genomic Study Links Whorls and Behavior in Horses
Posted By: Gay3
Subject: Genomic Study Links Whorls and Behavior in Horses
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2022 at 3:15pm
https://thehorse.com/1110229/genomic-study-links-whorls-and-behavior-in-horses/" rel="nofollow - https://thehorse.com/1110229/genomic-study-links-whorls-and-behavior-in-horses/
If you suspect your horse’s hair whorls have something to do with his personality, you might be right. For the first time in any species, scientists have found a possible genetic link between whorls and behavior—and they found it in Quarter Horses.

Using sequencing techniques, Brazilian scientists revealed the likely genomic regions responsible for hair whorls. These regions code not only for follicle growth but also for neurologic and behavioral functions, suggesting a genetic-biological link between whorls and temperament, said Gregório Miguel Ferreira de Camargo, PhD, of the School of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science at the Federal University of Bahia, in Salvador, Brazil.

The findings confirm what many horse people have long suspected about the various swirling hair spots on horses’ heads and necks, he said.

“It has been already reported that horses with whorls above the eye line are more difficult to handle in comparison to the ones with whorls in the eye line or below,” said Ferreira de Camargo, citing previous studies. “Whorl traits and behavior are associated. This correlation, in genetics, might be caused by two factors: linkage (two separate genes are inherited together) and/or pleiotropy (a single gene code for two separate traits).”

Ferreira de Camargo and his colleagues genotyped partial genomes from 342 Quarter Horses to find candidate genes responsible for the number and location of whorls on the head and neck. They found genomic “windows”—regions likely to be related to these traits—that, together, https://dx.doi.org/10.3390%2Fani11102925" rel="nofollow - explained up to 80% of the whorl genetic differences in individual horses , (https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/11/10/2925 ) copy/paste -  depending on the trait.

Those windows included many genes related to hair follicle growth, Ferreira de Camargo said. But interestingly, he said, some of those same genes also had known neurologic and behavioral functions. For example, gene KLF5 on chromosome ECA17 appeared to be associated with the location of whorls on the head (either above, at, or below eye level). In humans, this gene controls hair follicle repair and regrowth, but it’s also known to be associated with chronic schizophrenia. And the number of whorls on the head appears to be at least partially determined by gene SIRT1 on chromosome ECA1. This gene is expressed in the hair follicle and has been associated with depression and schizophrenia in previous studies. Other candidate genes in windows related to the number of whorls correlate with neurologic disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, he said.

“These genomic regions are definitively associated to whorl formation,” Ferreira de Camargo told The Horse. “We are sure because we used whorl phenotypes and not follicle growth phenotypes. So, we precisely addressed the variation based on whorls.”

The results were no surprise for Ferreira de Camargo and his team, he added. “In fact, we expected to find genomic regions that could be used to explain the association by linkage or pleiotropy,” he said. “Fortunately, we were able to launch some hypotheses about the physiology behind the association of whorls and behavior.”

Future research should aim to carry out genome-wide associations between whorls and temperament and detail the genomic regions identified in the current study, said Ferreira de Camargo.

Studies correlating whorls with performance traits—racing, jumping, or dressage ability, for example—could also be an important research path, he added. Such research “could provide more practical results of whorls and even the development of genetic tests for selection,” Ferreira de Camargo said.

Lima DFPA, da Cruz VAR, Pereira GL, Curi RA, Costa RB, de Camargo GMF. Genomic Regions Associated with the Position and Number of Hair Whorls in Horses. Animals (Basel). 2021;11(10):2925. Published 2021 Oct 10. doi:10.3390/ani11102925



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It takes a wise man a lifetime to grow a tree and a fool five minutes to kill one.



Replies:
Posted By: GAJ
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2022 at 8:04pm
I'm going to check whorls in the morning!


Posted By: Hello Sunshine
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2022 at 8:11pm
Was that published on April 1st?



Posted By: Second Chance
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2022 at 8:33pm
Fwiw the above was published in the Horse, unquestionably one of the world's most authoritative and respected equine on-line and hard copy publications.


Posted By: Gay3
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2022 at 8:50pm
I've no idea how the link didn't work initially as I definitely put it in & it did work for once (no need to copy/paste), however, it's there now & yes HC pretty sure April 1 Smile


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It takes a wise man a lifetime to grow a tree and a fool five minutes to kill one.


Posted By: Second Chance
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2022 at 9:05pm
Published 3 April which may be 2 April here. No April Fool's stuff, though to be truthful haven't actually read the article.

But have a copy of its 900-odd page hard copy publication and receive almost daily updates so very much doubt they're taking the p1ss.


Posted By: Hello Sunshine
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2022 at 11:34pm
When you have read it, give a summary.

I have seen a few alleged "improvements " for the benefit of horses and had a few owners fork out their hard earned in the belief it will work.
Stuff like analysis of hair,, hyaluronic acid for joints, vast array of fancy food stuff and additives etc etc
I asked someone whilst they applied an  over the tongue "sedative' if they thought it worked.
They said no, but i suppose it calmed the horse person and made the manufacturer rich.
I note some of those nature applications are banned in the race horse world.
Mostly it is time that is the big healer


Posted By: Hello Sunshine
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2022 at 11:37pm
I suspect some will reject horses if the whorls are not right.
Or handle the horse differently.
Like labelling chestnuts as fizzy.

Just be a good horse person and handler.



Posted By: JoH
Date Posted: 06 Apr 2022 at 4:06pm
Temple Grandin did some work on whorls and position of same and temperament / heart rate variability - small sample, still interesting though...

https://grandin.com/references/behavioral.laterality.facial.hair.whorls.heartrate.variability.horse.html" rel="nofollow - https://grandin.com/references/behavioral.laterality.facial.hair.whorls.heartrate.variability.horse.html



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suck it up ... Life isn't run at w.f.a. :)



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