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Horse's gait controlled by genetic mutation spread by humans

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ANI Washington
Last Updated : Feb 05 2014 | 11:40 AM IST

Researchers have suggested that a horse's gait, an attribute central to its importance to humans, has been influenced by a genetic mutation, which was spread by humans across the world.

The team, led by Dr. Leif Andersson from the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences explored the distribution of a mutation in the DMRT3 gene which affects the gait of horses, known as the "gait keeper."

Andersson said that all over the world, horses have been used for everyday transportation, in military settings, cattle herding and agricultural power, pulling carriages and carts, pleasure riding or racing, asserting that over the centuries, horse populations and breeds have been shaped by humans based on the different purposes for which the animals were used.

The DMRT3 gene is central to the utility of horses to humans, as it controls a range of gaits as well as pace. From racing to pleasure riding, many species have been bred to encourage smoothness of gait.

The team analyzed 4,396 horses from 141 breeds around the world and found that the 'gait keeper' mutation is spread across Eurasia from Japan in the East, to the British Isles in West, on Iceland, in both South and North America, and also in breeds from South Africa.

Andersson said that humans have spread this mutation across the world primarily because horses carrying this mutation are able to provide a very smooth ride, in some breeds referred to as a running walk, adding that during such ambling gaits the horse has at least one foot on the ground that means that the vertical movement of the rider is minimal.

The study has been published in the journal Animal Genetics.

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First Published: Feb 05 2014 | 11:30 AM IST

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