1. Delayed Fatherhood in Mice Decreases Reproductive Fitness and Longevity of Offspring1
- Author
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José Pertusa, Miguel Angel García-Pérez, Juan J. Tarín, Carlos Hermenegildo, Samuel Navarro, Antonio Cano, Silvia García-Palomares, and Francisco Rausell
- Subjects
Reproductive success ,Offspring ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Reproductive life ,Longevity ,Physiology ,Fertility ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Reproductive Medicine ,Ageing ,Weaning ,Reproduction ,media_common - Abstract
This study aims to analyze, in mice, the long-term effects of delayed fatherhood on reproductive fitness and longevity of offspring. Hybrid parental-generation (F0) males, at the age of 12, 70, 100, and 120 wk, were individually housed with a randomly selected 12-wk-old hybrid female. The reproductive fitness of first-generation (F1) females was tested from the age of 25 wk until the end of their reproductive life. In F1 males, the testing period ranged from the age of 52 wk until death. Breeding F1 females from the 120-wk group displayed interbirth intervals longer than females from the 12-, 70-, and 100-wk groups. Furthermore, F2 pups begotten by F1 studs exhibited weaning weights lower than pups from the 12- and 70-wk groups. Offspring from the 120-wk group exhibited shorter survival times associated with lower incidence of tumorigenesis and higher loss of body weight when approaching death when compared to F1 offspring from younger age-groups. The results indicate that advanced paternal age a...
- Published
- 2009
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