Resistance to the anticoagulant rodenticide warfarin and an increased vitamin K requirement appear to be pleiotropic effects of the gene Rw2. A comparison of pup mortality in F2 (Rw1Rw2 × Rw1Rw2) and backcross (Rw1Rw2 × Rw1Rw1 or reciprocal) matings of wild brown rats in the laboratory revealed significantly greater losses in the F2 litters at 4-8 weeks of age. Some deaths could be attributed directly to haemorrhage resulting from vitamin K deficiency. A newborn warfarin-resistant rat from an F2 litter showed bleeding from the umbilicus and the anus, and died from internal haemorrhage at 18 weeks of age. Another warfarin-resistant male rat dying at the same age had a grossly enlarged skull. © 1980, Royal Society of Medicine Press. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Partridge, G. G. (1980). Vitamin K deficiency syndromes in warfarin-resistant brown rats (Rattus norvegicus). Laboratory Animals, 14(3), 193–195. https://doi.org/10.1258/002367780780937616
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