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Differences in body compositions, growth and food intakes between mice which have been selected for a small or large body size

Effect of plane of neonatal nutrition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2007

Garry J. Rucklidge
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Greenburn Road, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB2 9SB
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Abstract

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1. Q-strain mice selected for high-line (QLF) or low-line (QSC) body-weights at 6 weeks of age were culled to litters of two or eight (QLF-2, QLF-8, QSC-2, QSC-8) at birth andwere suckled in these groups until 19 d of age.

2. Body-weights were measured daily for all groups and body compositions compared at birth and 19 and 42 d of age. Food intakes and urinary and faecal nitrogen were measured during metabolism trials between 19 and 42 d.

3. QLF-2 and QSC-2 mice grew faster than the corresponding groups of eight until 19 d of age. They also deposited more fat as a percentage of total gain.

4. In the period 19–42 d the influence of genetic selection reappeared and was manifest in a slowing of growth rates of QLF-2 and QSC-2 animals so that by 42 d of age therewere no differences in body-weight between the groups within a line.

5. During the period 19–42 d the total food intakes of each group within a line did not differ although, on the basis of food intake per unit metabolic body-weight (g/kg body-weight0.75 per d) QLF-2 and QSC-2 ate less food than QLF-8 and QSC-8respectively.

6. The differences in body-weight at 19 d between groups were largely overcome by the increased contribution of protein and water to the weight gain of the groups of eight duringthe post-weaning period.

Type
Papers on General Nutrition
Copyright
Copyright © The Nutrition Society 1982

References

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