Abstract
Dietary restriction (DR, also referred to as calorie restriction, energy restriction, and food restriction) retards senescence and increases longevity in mammals. DR also lowers mean body temperature ( T b), and thus mean T b might be useful as a covariate of DR-induced life extension. Indeed, lower T b could itself underlie some of the beneficial life-extension effects that occur during DR. To assess the relationship between lower T b during DR and life extension, we asked whether significant strain variation exists in the T b response of mice being fed 60% ad libitum (AL). Individually-housed, female mice from 28 strains, representing a genealogically diverse sample of the classical inbred strains, were directly compared. The mean T bs in response to DR exhibited highly significant strain variation, ranging from 1.5 °C below normal to a phenomenal 5 °C below normal. This variation was not explained by differences in loss of thermoregulation, AL adiposity, sensitivity to a nonadaptive hypothermia, motor activity, thermal arousal, absolute food intake, or efficacy of nutrient extraction. The variation in strain mean T b was also present in the absence of torpor. This strain variation could be used to critically test whether lower T b is a covariate of life extension during DR.
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