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A meta-analysis of whole-body and heart mass effect sizes from a long-term artificial selection experiment for high voluntary exercise.

Nicole E SchwartzTheodore Garland
Published in: The Journal of experimental biology (2024)
Selection experiments play an increasingly important role in comparative and evolutionary physiology. However, selection experiments can be limited by relatively low statistical power, in part because replicate line is the experimental unit for analyses of direct or correlated responses (rather than number of individuals measured). One way to increase the ability to detect correlated responses is through a meta-analysis of studies for a given trait across multiple generations. To demonstrate this, we applied meta-analytic techniques to two traits (body mass and heart ventricle mass, with body mass as a covariate) from a long-term artificial selection experiment for high voluntary wheel-running behavior. In this experiment, all 4 replicate High Runner (HR) lines reached apparent selection limits around generations 17-27, running approximately 2.5-3-fold more revolutions/day than the 4 non-selected Control (C) lines. Although both traits would also be expected to change in HR lines (relative heart size expected to increase, expected direction for body mass is less clear), the statistical significance has varied, despite repeated measurements. We compiled information from 33 unique studies and calculated a measure of effect size (Pearson's R). Our results indicate that, despite a lack of statistical significance in most generations, HR mice have evolved larger hearts and smaller bodies relative to Controls. Moreover, plateaus in effect sizes for both traits coincides with the generational range during which the selection limit for wheel-running behavior was reached. Finally, since the selection limit, absolute effect sizes for body mass and heart ventricle mass have gotten smaller (i.e., closer to 0).
Keyphrases
  • heart failure
  • genome wide
  • high intensity
  • atrial fibrillation
  • skeletal muscle
  • type diabetes
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • gene expression
  • physical activity
  • magnetic resonance
  • adipose tissue
  • contrast enhanced