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Born to Run: Experimental Evolution of High Voluntary Exercise Mice Professor Theodore Garland, Jr., Ph.D. Department of Biology 1 Collaborators in Our Lab or at U.C., Riverside: Collaborators Elsewhere (partial list): Wendy Acosta Doug Altshuler Anne M. Bronikowski Vincent Careau Patrick A. Carter Mark A. Chappell Gerald C. Claghorn Mark A. Coleman Elizabeth Dlugosz Isabelle Girard Fernando R. Gomes Robert M. Hannon Brooke K. Keeney Scott A. Kelly Erik M. Kolb Terry Belke Abel Bult-Ito Hannah Carey Greg Cartee Lynn Copes Serge Daan Brigitte Demes Gary Diffee Cynthia Downs Joey C. Eisenmann Patricia A. Freeman Fred H. (Rusty) Gage Stephen C. Gammie Helga Guderley Russ Hepple Peter Hurd Aaron M. Janowsky Denis Joanisse Pawel Koteja Guo Li Chris Lytle Jessica L. Malisch Morris & Gina Maduro Thomas H. Meek Kevin Middleton Tricia Radojcic Enrico L. Rezende Justin S. Rhodes Derek Roff Heidi Schutz John Shyy John G. Swallow Shizhong Xu Many Undergrads Isabella Jonas Grant McClelland Kevin M. Middleton Gordon S. Mitchell Andy Obenaus Mark Olfert Steve F. Perry Daniel Pomp Thomas A. Prolla Gary Sieck Sharon Swartz Doug Syme Nicole Templeman Lobke M. Vaanholt Gertjan van Dijk Henriette van Praag G. Henk Visser Ben B. Yaspelkis III This selection experiment began in 1993, > 100 publications. 2 Background & Introduction 3 Evolutionary Physiology How do populations change over time? How can we use "model organisms" to understand how evolution and genetics work? How important is natural selection in shaping biological diversity? How do organisms work? How can we use "model organisms" to understand how organisms work? Where is the line between "normal" individual variation and pathology? How do we promote health and cure disease? How does the way organisms work influence the way they evolve? Copyright by Theodore Garland, Jr. May 2007 4 We are studying: Animal Locomotion from the perspective of Evolutionary Physiology 5 An Observation about Behavior: Animals exhibit tremendous diversity in locomotor behavior (e.g., home range size). 6 An Observation about Behavior: Animals are diverse in locomotor behavior (e.g., home range size). Evolutionary causes: Why has this diversity evolved? Natural selection: what is the benefit? Physiological causes: How do animals work? Body structure and physiology: what is the limit? "Motivation" vs. performance ability? 7 Diversity in Locomotor Behavior log10 Home Range Area (km2) 49 Species of Mammals Large animals tend to have large home ranges. 3 2 But, even for different animals that are the same size, home ranges are very diverse and can be 100-times different. 1 0 -1 -2 0 1 2 log10 Body Mass (kg) 3 Note the logarithmic axes. 8 Diversity in Locomotor Behavior log10 Home Range Area (km2) 49 Species of Mammals 3 Carnivora 2 1 0 ungulates -1 -2 0 1 2 log10 Body Mass (kg) 3 Carnivores tend to have larger home ranges than herbivores. 9 An Observation about Behavior: Animals are diverse in locomotor behavior (e.g., home range size). Evolutionary causes: Why has this diversity evolved? Natural selection: what is the benefit? Physiological causes: How do animals work? Body structure and physiology: what is the limit? "Motivation" vs. performance ability? 10 Diversity in Locomotor Behavior log10 Home Range Area (km2) 49 Species of Mammals 3 Carnivora 2 Eat Herbivores 1 0 ungulates Might the kind of diet be a reason for the diversity? -1 -2 0 1 2 Eat Plants 3 log10 Body Mass (kg) Garland, T., Jr., A. W. Dickerman, C. M. Janis, and J. A. Jones. 1993. Phylogenetic analysis of covariance by computer simulation. Systematic Biology 42:265-292. 11 Diversity in Locomotor Behavior log10 Home Range Area (km2) 49 Species of Mammals 3 Carnivora 2 Eat Herbivores 1 0 ungulates Possibly just a direct environmental effect? -1 -2 0 1 2 Eat Plants 3 log10 Body Mass (kg) 12 An Observation about Behavior: Animals are diverse in locomotor behavior (e.g., home range size). Evolutionary causes: Why has this diversity evolved? Natural selection: what is the benefit? Physiological causes: How do animals work? Body structure and physiology: what is the limit? "Motivation" vs. performance ability? 13 We can attempt to answer these questions with experimentation. Lions, and tigers, and bears (oh my!) are great, but not the most convenient organisms to study … 15 "…research in which populations are studied across multiple generations under defined and reproducible conditions, whether in the laboratory or in nature." 16 Charles Darwin did not recognize this as a way to study evolution because he thought the process was too slow. 17 Humans can also show diversity in locomotor behavior. Locomotion & Activity Levels ● Individual differences in voluntary activity levels are large in both human beings and other animals (both in the lab and in the wild). 19 An Observation about Behavior: Animals are diverse in locomotor behavior (e.g., home range size). Evolutionary causes: Why has this diversity evolved? Natural selection: what is the benefit? Physiological causes: How do animals work? Body structure and physiology: what is the limit? "Motivation" vs. performance ability? 20 Locomotion & Activity Levels ● Individual differences in voluntary activity levels are large in both human beings and other animals (both in the lab and in the wild). ● Physiology: what are the causes of these individual differences? ● may be related to variation in both motivation and ability to perform physical activity (brain & brawn); ● may also be part of the homeostatic mechanisms for energy balance and body composition. 21 Locomotion & Activity Levels ● Both motivation & ability must be affected by 1) multiple alleles (genes), 2) numerous environmental factors, 3) interactions of genes and environment. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink! 22 Genetic Factors in Locomotion and Activity Levels Locomotion & Activity Levels ● Both motivation & ability must be affected by 1) alleles (genes) segregating at multiple loci, 2) numerous environmental factors, 3) interactions of genes and environment. ● Except in certain pathological conditions, we should not expect to find "the gene for activity," but we can hope to find genes (polygenes) that account for an important fraction of the variation in activity levels. 24 Locomotion & Activity Levels ● Both motivation & ability must be affected by 1) alleles (genes) segregating at multiple loci, 2) numerous environmental factors, 3) interactions of genes and environment. ● Except in certain pathological conditions, we should not expect to find "the gene for activity," but we can hope to find genes (polygenes) that account for an important fraction of the variation in activity levels. ● Understanding how such genes work could lead to therapeutic strategies for low-activity individuals. 25 Experimental Evolution • Evolution: – Can we cause activity levels to change across generations by selective breeding? – Are genes important in determining activity levels? • Physiology: – How is body structure affected? Bones, muscles, circulatory system? – What is the role of motivation? Brain structure? – What is the role of metabolism? Methods 27 Why Select on Wheel-Running? 1. potentially physiologically taxing - did you ever have a pet hamster? 2. individual differences are highly repeatable (consistent) from day-to-day 3. genetically inherited to some extent 4. easy to automate measurement 5. an important regulator of body mass and composition 6. analogous to human voluntary activity? (e.g., Eikelboom, 1999) http://school.discovery.com/clipart/clip/ani-mouse.html 28 Experimental Design Starting (Base) Population: 112 male & 112 female outbred mice Design: 8 lines: 4 Selected for High Running (HR lines), 4 non-selected Control 10 mating pairs in each (litter size ~10) Within-family selection Selection Criterion: Wheel revolutions on days 5 + 6 This is a completely "voluntary" behavior. 29 Important point! ● We did not select for low voluntary running because it might not be the same trait as high wheel running. ● For example, selection for low running might simply increase fear of entering the wheels. ● For humans, active behaviors may not be opposites of sedentary behaviors. ● Jogging is not the opposite of playing a video game. ● Also, selection for low performance might be accomplished by increasing frequency of “harmful” alleles (deleterious recessives), thus leading to sickly mice from a variety of causes. 30 Wheels are Attached to Standard Housing Cages 31 200 total wheels, 100 in each of two rooms Food and water are always available. 32 Results 33 Revolutions/Day on days 5 + 6 17000 Wheel Circumference = 1.12 m 15000 Selected 13000 11000 Our lab moved from U. Wisconsin to U. Calif. 9000 Selected run almost 3X more than control 7000 Control 5000 3000 1000 0 0 14FRUN56.DSF 55 10 10 15 15 20 20 25 25 30 30 Generation 35 35 40 40 45 45 50 50 34 Revolutions/Day on days 5 + 6 17000 Wheel Circumference = 1.12 m 15000 Males always tend to run less than females, but the fold difference between selected and control lines is the same as in females. 13000 Selected 11000 9000 7000 Control 5000 3000 1000 0 0 14MRUN56.DSF 5 5 10 10 15 15 20 20 25 25 30 30 Generation 35 35 40 40 45 45 50 50 35 How do Mice from the Selected Lines Run More? 36 Data are collected about the wheel revolutions logged by the mice. • Selected mice run more revolutions/day than controls • Selected mice do not run for longer time period than controls • Selected mice do run faster than controls Ratio of Selected/Control Lines 3 Females 2.8 2.6 Total Revolutions 2.4 2.2 2 1.8 1.6 Remember, for these ratios: 1.4 1 means that selected & control are the same 1.2 <1 means control is higher than selected 1 >1 means selected is higher than control 0.8 0 0 22 44 6 6 8 30 32 8 10 10 12 12 14 14 16 16 18 18 20 20 22 22 24 24 26 26 28 28 30 32 Generation 38 Ratio of Selected/Control Lines 3 Females 2.8 2.6 Total Revolutions 2.4 2.2 2 1.8 1.6 Min/Day 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0 0 22 44 6 6 8 30 32 8 10 10 12 12 14 14 16 16 18 18 20 20 22 22 24 24 26 26 28 28 30 32 Generation 39 Ratio of Selected/Control Lines 3 Females 2.8 2.6 Total Revolutions 2.4 2.2 2 R.P.M. 1.8 1.6 Min/Day 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0 0 22 44 6 6 8 30 32 8 10 10 12 12 14 14 16 16 18 18 20 20 22 22 24 24 26 26 28 28 30 32 Generation 40 Show movie that accompanies: Girard, I., M. W. McAleer, J. S. Rhodes, and T. Garland, Jr. 2001. Selection for high voluntary wheel running increases intermittency in house mice (Mus domesticus). Journal of Experimental Biology 204:4311-4320. http://www.biology.ucr.edu/people/faculty/Garland/Girard01.mov Mice from the selected lines mainly run faster than those from control lines. 41 What about activity in ordinary cages? Force plates detect any movement in the cage. 42 HCA_sensors_and_computer_2_shrunk.jpg S & C Lines Also Differ in Regular Cage Activity Lights Off 120000 100000 80000 control 60000 selected 40000 20000 10:00 9:00 8:00 7:00 6:00 5:00 4:00 3:00 Males 2:00 1:00 0:00 23:00 22:00 21:00 20:00 19:00 18:00 17:00 16:00 15:00 14:00 0 13:00 units) (normalized Activity Normalized Activity Units Normalized Activity Units Females Time in Hours 120000 100000 80000 Cage activity is much higher in mice from the Selected lines when they do not have wheels. Control 60000 Selected 40000 20000 10:00 9:00 8:00 7:00 6:00 5:00 4:00 3:00 2:00 1:00 0:00 23:00 22:00 21:00 20:00 19:00 18:00 17:00 16:00 15:00 14:00 13:00 0 Time in Hours g44_circadian_hca.xls Time (hours) 43 Malisch et al., 2008, 2009 How Else do the Selected and Control Lines Differ? 44 Something to consider What makes an individual a good distance runner? 45 Body Size and Composition Mice from the Selected lines: • are smaller in body size • have less body fat, even when housed without wheels • eat more for their body weight, even when housed without wheels • show no statistically significant difference from the Control lines in basal or resting metabolic rate 46 Exercise Adaptations? 47 Using Oxygen = Maximal Aerobic Capacity http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3108/2325682863_f41a385d5c.jpg http://nyvelocity.com/files/old/pictures/image/cadence/collete3.jpg Single best indicator of cardiopulmonary function Sets upper limit to exercise intensity you can sustain for a long time 48 Maximal Aerobic Capacity or . VO2max Mice generally won’t cooperate to wear a mask … 49 . VO2max of Males at Generation 32 Body-mass adjusted Mean and Standard Error (average) (a measure of uncertainty) 0.25 = 33% higher 0.20 ml O2 min x gram 0.15 0.10 0.05 0.00 Control Control Selected Selected Rezende, E. L., S. A. Kelly, F. R. Gomes, M. A. Chappell, and T. Garland, Jr. 2006. Effects of size, sex, and voluntary running speeds on costs of locomotion in lines of laboratory mice selectively bred for high wheel-running activity. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 79:83-99. 50 Treadmill Endurance Capacity Meek, T. H., B. P. Lonquich, R. M. Hannon, and T. Garland, Jr. 2009. Endurance capacity of mice selectively bred for high voluntary wheel running. Journal of Experimental Biology 212: 2908-2917. 51 Treadmill Endurance (gen. 49) % Remaining 100 HR Males 90 HR Females 80 C Males 70 C Females Mice from the Selected lines have higher endurance capacity. 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Endurance Time (min) Means Endurance Time (minutes) Female Male Selected 35.0 32.6 Control 28.1 26.3 S/C 1.24 52 Exercise Adaptations Increased Insulin-Stimulated Glucose Uptake of Isolated Extensor Digitorum Longus Muscles (extends toes 2-5 and dorsiflexes ankle) Mice from the Selected lines are better able to utilize some of the energy stores in their muscles. Gen. 17 Males Wheels & No wheels for 2 months Dumke et al. 2001. Journal of Applied Physiology 91:1289-1297. 53 Exercise Adaptations Larger Femoral Heads Also true for humans! Garland, T., Jr., and P. A. Freeman. 2005. Selective breeding for high endurance running increases hindlimb symmetry. Evolution 59:1851-1854. Kelly, S. A., P. P. Czech, J. T. Wight, K. M. Blank, and T. Garland, Jr. 2006. Experimental evolution and phenotypic plasticity of hindlimb bones in high-activity house mice. Journal of Morphology 267:360-374. 54 Exercise Adaptations Thicker Femurs and Tibiafibulas (but not longer) Maybe you expected the Selected lines to have evolved longer legs? Gen. 21B Males Wheels & No Wheels for 2 months Kelly, S. A., P. P. Czech, J. T. Wight, K. M. Blank, and T. Garland, Jr. 2006. Experimental evolution and phenotypic plasticity of hindlimb bones in high-activity house mice. Journal of Morphology 267:360-374. 55 Exercise Adaptations More Symmetrical Hindlimb Bone Lengths Also true for English thoroughbred horses! Garland, T., Jr., and P. A. Freeman. 2005. Selective breeding for high endurance running increases hindlimb symmetry. Evolution 59:1851-1854. 56 Exercise Adaptations Increased Heart Mass (adjusted for differences in body mass) Gen. 35 Females 5 days of Wheel Access Gomes et al. 2004. SICB Talk. Gen. 37 Females Wheels & No Wheels for 3 months Kelly et al. HVR In preparation. Gen. 49 Females Wheels & No Wheels for 2 months Kelly et al. Cotman In preparation. 57 Exercise Adaptations Reduced Hindlimb Muscle Mass This difference is similar to what we see for human marathon runners. Garland, T., Jr., M. T. Morgan, J. G. Swallow, J. S. Rhodes, I. Girard, J. G. Belter, and P. A. Carter. 2002. Evolution of a small-muscle polymorphism in lines of house mice selected for high activity levels. Evolution 56:1267-1275. 58 The Brain & Motivation Mice from the Selected lines have larger brains, but not the cerebellum. red: purple: blue: yellow: orange: caudate-putamen ventricles hippocampus midbrain cerebellum MRI scan done at Loma Linda University 59 What neurotransmitters (brain chemicals) are involved in motivation? Dopamine is a logical candidate. Initial Experimental Test: compare response to drugs that target dopaminergic function. 60 Dopamine Transporter Blockers Ritalin, GBR 12909, Cocaine (also serotonin) Receptor Agonist Apomorphine (non-selective) Receptor Antagonists Raclopride (D-2), SCH23390 (D-1) Serotonin Transporter Blocker Prozac Endogenous Opioids Receptor Antagonists Naloxone Naltrexone Rhodes, J. S., S. C. Gammie, and T. Garland, Jr. 2005. Neurobiology of mice selected for high voluntary wheel-running activity. Integrative and Comparative Biology 45:438-455. 61 Results: Pharmacology Several dopamine drugs had differential effects on C and S lines. 62 Results: Pharmacology Several dopamine drugs had differential effects on C and S lines. For example, Ritalin increased running in C lines, but decreased it in S lines, almost down to level of controls. 63 Wheel Running Distance (m) Selected Lines 350 300 250 open = Saline closed = Ritalin 200 150 100 Control Lines 50 0 -10 10 30 Ritalin Injection 50 70 90 110 130 Time (min) 64 Wheel Running Distance (m) Selected Lines 350 300 250 Therefore, the Selected open = Saline 200 closed = Ritalin 150lines are a potentially 100useful model for Control Lines 50 studying human ADHD. 0 -10 10 30 Ritalin Injection 50 70 90 110 130 Time (min) 65 Results: Pharmacology Several dopamine drugs had differential effects on C and S lines. For example, Ritalin increased running in C lines, but decreased it in S lines, down to level of controls. No drug increased wheel running in the selected lines. Therefore, motivation and/or ability to run may be at a physiological limit. 66 Conclusions & Future Directions 67 Conclusions ● Experimental evolution can be a rapid and effective way to alter the characteristics of organisms and increase our understanding of both physiology and evolution. ● Evolutionary increases in voluntary activity levels entail increases in both motivation and ability to perform physical activity. ● Some traits that have changed seem to represent clear adaptations to support high . locomotor activity (e.g., higher VO2max). ● Others might be maladaptive byproducts (not discussed today). 68 Future Directions ● Figure out what is limiting further increases in wheel running. Exercise ability vs. motivation? ● Unravel the neural and psychological mechanisms of motivation for exercise. Is this like an addiction? ● Find the genes that cause higher running. What are they doing? 69 And Maybe Even … ● Consider translation to human beings. Might we develop drugs that make it more pleasurable for people to exercise? Or less pleasurable to be sedentary? 70 Resources 71 Resources ● The scientific papers on Dr. Garland's mice can be found as PDF files at his website: http://www.biology.ucr.edu/people/faculty/Garland.html ● 1-hour lecture on the mouse experiment: http://cnas.ucr.edu/sciencelectures/garlandlecture.html ● Wikipedia has various relevant sites: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experimental_evolution http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionary_physiology http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_physiology http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution 72 Extra Slides Follow 73 Ratio of Selected/Control Lines 3 Females 2.8 2.6 Total Revolutions 2.4 2.2 This is the average wheel running for selected females divided by the average Wheel running in control females per generation 2 1.8 Wild Females 1.6 1.4 1.2 The Real "Wild Type" 1 0.8 0 0 22 44 6 6 8 30 32 8 10 10 12 12 14 14 16 16 18 18 20 20 22 22 24 24 26 26 28 28 30 32 Generation 74 S & C Lines at Gen. 24 vs. 13 Other Species But the Selected lines are not "abnormal" Revolutions/Day 15000 15000 Selected 10000 10000 5000 5000 00 This is a substantial evolutionary difference. 10 10 20 20 Control 30 30 40 40 Body Mass (grams) 50 50 75 Revolutions per 20 minutes Daily Pattern Does Not Differ Much ... 700 600 Selected 500 Given that we keep selecting, why don’t they also run for more minutes per night? 400 300 200 100 Control 0 18:00 00:00 6:00 12:00 76 Why a Selection Limit? Functional Answers: Motivation or Reward at a Maximum Ability to Run at a Maximum Energetic Cost is too High Not mutually exclusive, May elucidate mechanisms of evolutionary “constraints” 77 Treadmill Endurance Capacity Endurance Day 2 (minutes) 60 N = 74 r = 0.785 P = 1-16 50 The selected lines have greater endurance than the control lines 40 Control Female Control Male Selected Female Selected Male 30 20 paired t = 4.57 P = 0.00002 10 10 20 30 40 50 60 Endurance Day 1 (minutes) Generation 49 78 Maximal Sprint Speed on a 6-meter Photocelltimed Racetrack Generation 48, Meek et al., unpublished results 79 Maximal Sprint Speed Sprint Speed Day 2 (m/s) 2.5 N = 118 r = 0.640 P = 6-15 But there is no difference in sprinting ability Control Female Control Male Selected Female Selected Male 1.5 paired t = 6.79 P = 5-10 0.5 0.5 1.5 2.5 Sprint Speed Day 1 (m/s) Generation 48, Meek et al., unpublished results 80 Exercise Adaptations Increased GLUT-4 Glucose Transporter Concentration in Gastrocnemius Muscles (after wheel access) (extends ankle) Gastrocnemius Gen. 35 Females 5 days of Wheel Access Sampled in Afternoon Gomes et al. 2009 81 Nature 2006 444:1000-1001 Tim Noakes 82 Hypothesis from the business world: Exceptional performance is 50% attitude & 50% aptitude. "What separates high performers from lesser competitors isn’t just talent. It's the way they fuse their capability and mindset." 83 Constant Dark Constant Light 84 It occurs when the wheel is harder to turn. If wheels are locked to prevent rotation, selected mice climb more. Based on these behavioral data, we hypothesize that selected mice possess higher motivation to run. 85 The Increased Wheel Running Lasts for Much of the Lifespan Females Males 70 70 Wheel Running(km/week) Wheel Running (km/week) 80 60 50 40 30 20 60 50 40 30 20 Control Selected Control Selected 10 10 5 15 25 35 45 Age (weeks) 55 65 75 85 5 15 25 35 45 55 65 75 85 Age (weeks) and is Quite General: 86 Does the brain show evidence of increased motivation for running? Mice from both Control and Selected lines were given wheel access for 6 days. On day 7, two hours before lights off, wheels were blocked for 1/2 of the mice. 14 of 23 brain regions showed higher activity in mice with blocked wheels, which may indicate motivation, stress, anticipation, frustration, anxiety or depression. The data also showed an interaction between wheel type (blocked and free) and line type (control and selected), suggesting greater motivation in selected mice. 87 c-fos Immunoreactivity in Striatum (CPu) Selected with Blocked Wheel FosCell CellCount count Fos 500 Interaction P = 0.03 400 300 200 100 0 Control Selected Control Selected Blocked Free Selected with Free Wheel 88 The Effects of Diet 89 Effects of a "Western" Diet Males from generation 52 Weaned at 21 days of age, housed individually At 25 days of age, divided into: Sedentary Wheel Access Standard Diet 50 50 Western Diet 50 50 42% kcal from fat plus added sucrose Analyses of blood and tissue samples are currently in progress … 90 Retroperitoneal Fat: 82 days old Retroperitoneal Fat Pad Mass (g) 3 2.5 C C 2 C C 1.5 S S 1 S S 0.5 0 Diet S W No Wheel S W Wheel Control Least Squares Means ± SE 1 S W No Wheel S W Wheel Selected 91 Effects of a "Western" Diet Revolutions/Day Revolutions/Day 14,000 12,000 Days 17-30 of wheel access 10,000 52% Increase +36% Time +18% Speed 8,000 6,000 These mice are unique! 4,000 2,000 0 Adjusted Means + Standard Errors Std. Control, Normal Western Control, High Fat Control Std. Selected, Normal Western Selected, High Fat Selected 92 Introduction, version 1.0 (more evolutionary) 93 From either perspective, as Darwin wrote: "The whole organism is so tied together that when slight variations in one part occur, and are accumulated through natural selection, other parts become modified." "This is a very important subject, most imperfectly understood." Charles Darwin (1859) The Origin of Species 94 Future Directions 1 ● Figure out what "Western" diet is doing to the selected lines. Are they protected from its adverse effects (development of metabolic syndrome, etc.)? ● Unravel the neural and psychological mechanisms of motivation for exercise. Is this like an addiction? ● Find the genes that cause higher running. What is their mechanism of action? 95 Future Directions 2 ● Consider translation to human beings. Might we develop drugs that make it more pleasurable for people to exercise? 96