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  • [♩INTRO]

  • You might have noticed that a lot of corgi mixes look exactly like

  • a corgi in a costume of a different dog breed.

  • The Internet certainly has.

  • Go pull up some pictures.

  • We'll wait.

  • No matter what, though, something about these pups always screamscorgi.”

  • It's the stumpy legs that gives them away.

  • Those legs aren't just a coincidence, though.

  • They're actually the product of thousands of years of breeding.

  • Orinbreeding.

  • And those little legs come from a funky mutant gene

  • that's been passed down the whole way.

  • Every corgi carries genes for dwarfism.

  • And purebred corgis have been bred to make sure that trait gets passed on every time.

  • But when corgis breed with other dogs, their pups often have those same

  • little legs, because that gene is dominant

  • so even if a dog has only one copy of the gene, short legs will win out.

  • Except that's not the whole story.

  • In corgis, dwarfism isn't caused by any old gene.

  • It's caused by a mutant gene called a retrogene.

  • A retrogene forms when the usual system for building proteins

  • doesn't go as planned.

  • In a normal case, a gene, made of DNA, is transcribed into a molecule

  • called messenger RNA, or mRNA.

  • The cell then interprets that code and uses it as an instruction manual

  • to build a protein.

  • Which usually works great!

  • Except, in rare cases, that mRNA code

  • which is only supposed to act as a messenger

  • gets converted back into DNA.

  • And in even rarer cases,

  • that converted DNA manages to slip back into the genomein a different place.

  • Usually that gene doesn't do anything; it just sits there.

  • But under special circumstances,

  • that duplicated gene can even produce proteins.

  • That's exactly what's happening with the short-legged dog imposters.

  • Multiple genes can cause dwarfism in dogs, but in corgis, and corgi mixes,

  • dwarfism is caused by a retrogene.

  • Specifically, there are multiple retrogenes derived from a gene called FGF4.

  • It codes for a type of protein called a growth factor

  • that tells the body's cells how to grow.

  • And that's a normal gene that all dogs have on chromosome 18.

  • But it's become a retrogene and copied itself back into the genome -- more than once.

  • There's one of these retrogenes on chromosome 12, and one on chromosome 18.

  • Either one is enough to cause dwarfism in dogs.

  • But some really stumpy breeds -- like corgis and dachshunds -- have both.

  • Scientists think that the expression of these extra growth factors

  • may alter the dogs' development.

  • In fact, similar genetic changes are linked with dwarfism in humans.

  • In short-legged dogs, the extra FGF4 tells limbs to stop growing early,

  • so the ends of their bones harden,

  • and you end up with a regular-sized dog with stubby legs.

  • And many breeds, from Pekingese to basset hounds, have short legs for similar reasons!

  • That tells us two things.

  • One, this mutation appeared a really long time ago,

  • back in the early days of domesticating dogs.

  • And two, humans throughout history have found this trait so attractive

  • that they bred these waddly dogs into existence all around the world.

  • The cuteness is not without its downsides, though.

  • The same retrogene that gives dogs their adorable waddle

  • is also linked with spinal disease that can cause pain and neurological damage,

  • which scientists are still trying to understand.

  • So next time you see one of those dogs in a corgi-shaped package,

  • remember it's because humans have a soft spot for those little, furry mutants

  • and probably have ever since our long friendship with dogs began.

  • Now that you've had your dose of cute internet dogs,

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  • [♩OUTRO]

Thanks to Brilliant for supporting this episode of SciShow!

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