Abstract

High and low immune responder lines of mice were bred selectively from an allogeneic stock over 10 generations, based on their fecal parasite egg count assayed 3 weeks after reinfection with 100 Nematospiroides dubius larvae. By generation 10, (F10), the low immune response mice voided about 10 times as many fecal N. dubius eggs as the high immune response mice. Realized heritability for the selected trait, fecal egg count after secondary infection (= protective immunity), was 0.35 at F7. F7 was considered the selection limit. Selection for change in fecal egg count did not significantly influence the conformational nor reproductive characteristics of these mice. Significant phenotypic and genetic correlations were evident between the selected character and innate immunity to N. dubius, humoral antibody response to N. dubius infection, and establishment, growth, and reproduction of N. dubius in the selected mice.

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