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Department of Physiology and Molecular Medicine, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, Ohio 43614
As a first step toward
identifying the genes that determine sensorimotor ability (motor
coordination) we subjected 11 inbred strains of rats to three different
tests for this trait. Rats were tested at 13 wk of age to determine how
long they could remain on 1) a
rotating cylinder as the velocity of rotation increased every 5 s (1-direction rotation test),
2) a rotating cylinder that reversed
direction every 5 s and increased velocity every 10 s (2-direction
rotation test), and 3) a platform
that was tilted 2° every 5 s from 22 to 47° (tilt test). On all
three tests, rats of the PVG strain demonstrated the greatest
sensorimotor ability. In contrast, rats of the MNS strain were most
often represented among the group of strains that demonstrated the
lowest performance on all tests. Considering all three tests, there was
a 3- to 13-fold range in sensorimotor performance between the highest
and lowest strains. This large divergence between the highest and
lowest strains provides a genetic model that can be used to identify intermediate phenotypes and quantitative trait loci that contribute to
sensorimotor ability.
coordination; cosegregation analysis; heritability; genetic model
This article has been cited by other articles:
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L. G. Koch and S. L. Britton Genetic component of sensorimotor capacity in rats Physiol Genomics, May 13, 2003; 13(3): 241 - 247. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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