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Scientists trace origin of 'speed gene' in modern racehorses to British mare of 300 years ago

Wednesday, 25 January, 2012 


Dr Emmeline Hill, a genomics scientist at the UCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, and Mr Jim Bolger, renowned Irish racehorse trainer and breeder, pictured with Banimpire, a multiple-Group race winning racehorse.

Dr Emmeline Hill, a genomics scientist at the UCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, and Mr Jim Bolger, renowned Irish racehorse trainer and breeder, pictured with Banimpire, a multiple-Group race winning racehorse.

- All modern variants traced back to the legendary Nearctic

- Wide increase in variants of original ‘speed gene’ traced to Northern Dancer

Scientists have traced the origin of the 'speed gene' in Thoroughbred racehorses back to a single British mare that lived in the United Kingdom around 300 years ago, according to findings published in the scientific journal Nature Communications.

The origin of the 'speed gene' (C type myostatin gene variant) was revealed by analysing DNA from hundreds of horses, including DNA extracted from the skeletal remains of 12 celebrated Thoroughbred stallions born between 1764 and 1930.

"Changes in racing since the foundation of the Thoroughbred have shaped the distribution of 'speed gene' types over time and in different racing regions," explained Dr Emmeline Hill, the senior author of the study, and a genomics scientist at the UCD School of Agriculture and Food Science.

"But we have been able to identify that the original 'speed gene' variant entered the Thoroughbred from a single founder, which was most likely a British mare about 300 years ago, when local British horse types were the preeminent racing horses, prior to the formal foundation of the Thoroughbred racehorse."

The international scientific team led by scientists from University College Dublin, Equinome Ltd and the University of Cambridge, have traced all modern variants of the original 'speed gene' to the legendary Nearctic (1954–1973), and attribute the wider expansion of these variants to Northern Dancer (1961–1990), the son of Nearctic, and one of the most influential stallions of modern times.

"Having first identified the 'speed gene' in 2010, we decided to see if we could trace the origin of the gene variant using population genetics coupled with pedigree analysis. We wanted to understand where speed in the Thoroughbred came from."

Dr Hill is also a co-founder of Equinome, a UCD spin-out company headquartered at NovaUCD, which has developed The Equinome Speed Gene Test. This test is currently being used by the global bloodstock and racing industry to identify the optimum racing distance for individual Thoroughbred horses.