Heritability of treadmill running endurance in rats Article (Web of Science)

abstract

  • Treadmill running was evaluated as a phenotype for selective breeding for high- and low-endurance performance from a starting population of 18 male and 24 female outbred Sprague-Dawley rats. Each rat was exercised to exhaustion once per day for 5 consecutive days. The treadmill was set at a constant 15° slope, and the initial velocity of 10 m/min was increased by 1 m/min every 2 min. The total distance run on the single best day out of the five trials was taken as the measure of endurance performance. The original population (males and females combined, n = 42) ran on average for 396 m. The two lowest-performing pairs and two highest-performing pairs were selectively bred through three successive generations. After three generations of selection, performance of the offspring from the high selected line averaged 659 ± 36 m ( n = 20), whereas low-performance offspring ( n = 13) averaged 388 ± 28 m. The narrow-sense heritability, calculated as the regression of individual offspring performance on midparental value for each family, was 0.39 across the three generations. This implies that 39% of the variation in running endurance performance between the low and high selected lines was determined by heritable factors.

authors

  • Koch, Lauren Gerard
  • Meredith, Todd A.
  • Fraker, Teigen D.
  • Metting, Patricia J.
  • Britton, Steven Loyal

publication date

  • 1998

start page

  • R1455

end page

  • R1460

volume

  • 275

issue

  • 5