©The National Museum of Fine Arts in Sweden |
The Swedish king Karl XI on his horse Brilliant after the battle in Lund, December 4, 1676, painted by David Klรถcker Ehrenstrahl. |
The white horse is an icon for dignity which has had a huge impact on human culture across the world. An international team led by researchers at Uppsala University has now identified the mutation causing this spectacular trait and show that white horses carry an identical mutation that can be traced back to a common ancestor that lived thousands of years ago.
The study is interesting for medical research since this mutation also enhance the risk for melanoma. The paper is published on July 20 on the website of Nature Genetics.
The great majority of white horses carry the dominant mutation Greying with age. A Grey horse is born coloured (black, brown or chestnut) but the greying process starts already during its first year and they are normally completely white by six to eight years of age but the skin remains pigmented. Thus, the process resembles greying in humans but the process is ultrafast in these horses. The research presented now demonstrates that all Grey horses carry exactly the same mutation which must have been inherited from a common ancestor that lived thousands of years ago.
Comment: It's unfortunate that the authors didn't think to include - maybe because of the very effect under discussion - a far more crucial example: the destructive effect of pathological deviants in our society.