Publication | Open Access
Maximal metabolic rates during voluntary exercise, forced exercise, and cold exposure in house mice selectively bred for high wheel-running
96
Citations
57
References
2005
Year
Physical ActivityFitnessEducationVoluntary ExerciseHouse MicePhysiological ResearchKinesiologyBody MassExerciseApplied PhysiologySelective BreedingMetabolic RatesSport PhysiologyMetabolic StateHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyEnergy HomeostasisPhysical FitnessHuman PhysiologyEnergy MetabolismExercise PhysiologyPhysiologyEvolutionary BiologyMaximal Metabolic RatesHuman MovementMetabolism
Selective breeding for high wheel-running activity has generated four lines of laboratory house mice (S lines) that run about 170% more than their control counterparts (C lines) on a daily basis, mostly because they run faster. We tested whether maximum aerobic metabolic rates (V(O2max)) have evolved in concert with wheel-running, using 48 females from generation 35. Voluntary activity and metabolic rates were measured on days 5+6 of wheel access (mimicking conditions during selection), using wheels enclosed in metabolic chambers. Following this, V(O2max) was measured twice on a motorized treadmill and twice during cold-exposure in a heliox atmosphere (HeO2). Almost all measurements, except heliox V(O2max), were significantly repeatable. After accounting for differences in body mass (S < C) and variation in age at testing, S and C did not differ in V(O2max) during forced exercise or in heliox, nor in maximal running speeds on the treadmill. However, running speeds and V(O2max) during voluntary exercise were significantly higher in S lines. Nevertheless, S mice never voluntarily achieved the V(O2max) elicited during their forced treadmill trials, suggesting that aerobic capacity per se is not limiting the evolution of even higher wheel-running speeds in these lines. Our results support the hypothesis that S mice have genetically higher motivation for wheel-running and they demonstrate that behavior can sometimes evolve independently of performance capacities. We also discuss the possible importance of domestication as a confounding factor to extrapolate results from this animal model to natural populations.
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