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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 32, 1089-1098, Copyright © 1991 by Lipid Research, Inc.
ARTICLES |
TM Donnelly, SF Kelsey, DM Levine and TS Parker
Rogosin Institute, New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center 10021.
Between-animal variability has frustrated many experimental studies in outbred animal models of human disease. Variability that arises from genetic heterozygosity can be minimized by use of experimental designs that match littermates (polyzygotic twins) across control and treatment groups. Poor breeding vigor has prevented use of this experimental design in the WHHL rabbit model of hyperlipidemia and atherosclerosis. A comparison of reproduction in WHHL and normal rabbits demonstrated that litter size is limited by functional deficits at ovulation, implantation, and gestation in WHHL females. Superovulation of females reliably produced expanded litters of WHHL rabbits. Plasma lipids were measured in expanded litters of Japanese White WHHL (JW-WW) and English Half-lop WHHL (EHL-WW) rabbits. The variance of plasma cholesterol within sibships was two- to three-fold less than that between-litters. Intraclass correlation of total cholesterol within litters of EHL-WW was 0.72 and within litters of JW-WW was 0.67. These data provide evidence of genetic modulation of hypercholesterolemia in WHHL rabbits and demonstrate that experimental designs in which littermates are paired across groups can decrease the number of animals needed or increase the sensitivity of hypothesis tests by two- to threefold.
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