Polymorphisms of mitochondrial DNA & racing performance

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Patuxet
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Polymorphisms of mitochondrial DNA & racing performance

Postby Patuxet » Mon Feb 01, 2010 8:30 am

A team of researchers in Australia and China has been awarded a grant for their project "An investigation on the Polymorphisms of mitochondrial DNA in relation to racing performance in thoroughbred horses". Allan Davie, who has studied racehorses for over 20 years, is heading the research team.

Davie said it's well established that high aerobic power (maximum oxygen consumption) provided the physiological foundation for elite racing performance in both humans and horses and that maximum oxygen consumption is influenced by the mitochondria found within individual cells.

"Mitochondrial density and function regulate aerobic power. Therefore, the genotype of mitochondria - the genetic history - is one of the key factors that determine muscle utilisation of oxygen and aerobic performance."

The current understanding, he said, is that mitochondrial DNA is the only genetic material outside the nucleic DNA that is transferred exclusively from mother to offspring in mammals.

Here's a link to an article reporting on the research project: http://www.horsetalk.co.nz/news/2010/01/155.shtml
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Postby xfactor fan » Tue Feb 02, 2010 10:49 pm

Do you suppose they will publish the results with either names or family numbers or mtDNA designations so we can figure out the energy profiles?
Or is this research going to get rolled out as private testing?

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Postby Pan Zareta » Thu Feb 04, 2010 10:53 am

xfactor fan wrote:Do you suppose they will publish the results with either names or family numbers or mtDNA designations so we can figure out the energy profiles?
Or is this research going to get rolled out as private testing?


If there's a potential commercial value to the results, it seems doubtful that correlation of haplotype and pedigree/family# will be made public. :?

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Postby Patuxet » Wed Feb 10, 2010 6:16 pm

Steven Harrison in Britain has published work relating mtDNA variations to winning distance over about 30 years worth of English races. The study was published in the journal Mitochondrion in 2006 and there was a review in Pacemaker...http://thoroughbredgenetics.com/PACEMAKER%20BG.PDF
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Pan Zareta
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Postby Pan Zareta » Thu Feb 11, 2010 9:12 am

Patuxet wrote:The study was published in the journal Mitochondrion in 2006 and there was a review in Pacemaker...http://thoroughbredgenetics.com/PACEMAKER%20BG.PDF


:?: Review implies evaluation by a third party. That link is to a brief 'plain English' summary of the article, written by the same authors.

Fwiw - 17 mtDNA haplotype (defined by d-loop and functional regions) were identifed among 1000 TB's used for the 2006 study. Five of those haps. were determined to have a significant negative (3) or positive (2) correlation w/ racing distance. Multiple alleles were identified at 6 of 8 mtDNA genes.

The 3 haplotypes identified within that study as having a negative correlation for distance were all within the most common mtDNA haplogroup found among the sampled TBs. The authors, for obvious reasons of commercial interest, did not use the nomenclature of Vila et al. (2001) to label that haplogroup. But from other published, peer-reviewed, sources re. equine mtDNA the most common haplgroup in the TB is obviously D (Vila et al. 2001). Haplogroup D is inclusive of haplotypes B,C,D,E,F,G as identified by Hill et al. 2002. One of the 'sprint haplotypes' identified (2006) had a unique allele at the ND5 gene. The other two were distinguishable only in d-loop (non-coding) mtDNA from haplotypes with no apparent correlation for racing distance.

There's insufficient evidence to identify the haplogroups (as defined by Vila) of the 2 haplotypes (2006) that demonstrated positive correlation for racing distance. One of these had a unique allele at the ND2 and ND4 genes. The other had a unique allele at ND5.

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Postby vineyridge » Thu Feb 11, 2010 9:30 am

Yes, and Dr. Harrison is part of business doing TB genetics testing. Thanks for the article. If you follow the link at the top, you can see what his company offers.
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Postby brogers » Sat May 22, 2010 2:45 pm

In regards to the above mtDNA study, you might all be interested in this

http://www.faqs.org/patents/app/20090156414
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Postby xfactor fan » Sun May 23, 2010 12:06 am

Wow!

I'd love to get a hold of the table with the names of the horses and the matching mtDNA types.

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Postby Pan Zareta » Sun May 23, 2010 12:55 pm

brogers wrote:In regards to the above mtDNA study, you might all be interested in this

http://www.faqs.org/patents/app/20090156414


Do you know whether the patent applicant has taken or contemplates taking legal action in regard to equine mtDNA studies currently in progress?

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Postby xfactor fan » Wed May 26, 2010 9:48 am

Are they trying to patten mtDNA or a test to determine mtDNA?

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Postby diomed » Wed May 26, 2010 4:20 pm

xfactor fan wrote:Wow!

I'd love to get a hold of the table with the names of the horses and the matching mtDNA types.


You are not the only one!
I will take that further; I would love to see the list and then compare it to a list of quarter horse families(If they ever get to it for that breed).
Just for shit's and giggles. :wink:

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Postby Dave C » Thu May 27, 2010 7:51 am

xfactor fan wrote:Are they trying to patten mtDNA or a test to determine mtDNA?

I just scanned through it, rather than reading it carefully, but it looked to me that they were trying to get the patent office to give them as broad of a patent as possible, including the actual DNA. This is a logical trend that the courts will eventually have to deal with since the courts allowed genes to be patented in the first place. Some companies are going to try to collect royalties on 'their' genes from everyone and everything that posesses 'their' gene even if it is obtained naturally.

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Postby xfactor fan » Thu May 27, 2010 9:58 pm

Just how would someone enforce a patten on mtDNA, and how would someone enforce such a thing?

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Postby Pan Zareta » Sat May 29, 2010 10:52 am

xfactor fan wrote:how would someone enforce such a thing?


For one example, by restricting access to products, such as primers, necessary to determine mtDNA sequences.

Iirc, a patent appliation was pending when Harrison & Turrion-Gomez's report was published in Mitochondrion, 2006. Apparently one or more patents were granted, but I don't know in which country or for what. The Thoroughbred Genetics web site refers to "patented DNA tests" and to "a larger study which has allowed Thoroughbred Genetics to develop genetic databases covering national racing in the USA and Australia, which vary in their racing requirements from Europe". *Perhaps* Davie's research is part of that. If so, I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for any correlation of haplotype with pedigree and/or family number to be made public.

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Postby Dave C » Sun May 30, 2010 6:54 am

Right know the genome of every species is being treated as a new gold field: everyone is rushing to stake their claims (with patents). They will try and figure out a way to make people pay later. Incrementalism has always been a good technique to get people to accept something that they find repulsive.