Dogs 
 are genetically closer to man than mice, US researchers said, 
 detailing a partial sequencing of the dog genome. 
 The researchers at the Institute for Genomic Research and the 
 Center for the Advancement of Genomics assembled 6.22 million 
 sequences of dog DNA for nearly 80 percent coverage of the genome, 
 they said in a statement. 
 "Comparing the dog sequence data with current drafts of 
 the human and mouse genome sequences showed that the dog lineage 
 was the first to diverge from the common ancestor of the three 
 species, and that the human and dog are much more similar to each 
 other at the genetic level than to the mouse," they said 
 in results published in the review Science. 
 The project found that more than 25 percent, or 650 million base 
 pairs, of DNA overlap between human and dog. 
 "The sequence data was used to identify an equivalent dog 
 gene for 75 percent of known human genes," they added. 
 "In little more than a decade, genomics has advanced greatly 
 and we now have approximately 150 completed genomes including 
 the human, mouse and fruit fly, in the public domain," said 
 Craig Venter, president of the TCAG. 
 "Our new method is an efficient and effective way of sequencing 
 that will allow more organisms to be analyzed while still providing 
 significant information." 
 (Agencies)