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Sheltering behavior and locomotor activity in 11 genetically diverse common inbred mouse strains using home-cage monitoring

  • M. Loos
  • , B. Koopmans
  • , E. Aarts
  • , G. Maroteaux
  • , S. van der Sluis
  • , M. Verhage
  • , A.B. Smit
  • , A.B. Brussaard
  • , J.G. Borst
  • , Y. Elgersma
  • , N. Galjart
  • , G.T. van der Horst
  • , C.N. Levelt
  • , C.M. Pennartz
  • , A.B. Smit
  • , Berry Spruijt
  • , C.I. de Zeeuw

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Functional genetic analyses in mice rely on efficient and in-depth characterization of the behavioral spectrum. Automated home-cage observation can provide a systematic and efficient screening method to detect unexplored, novel behavioral phenotypes. Here, we analyzed high-throughput automated home-cage data using existing and novel concepts, to detect a plethora of genetic differences in spontaneous behavior in a panel of commonly used inbred strains (129S1/SvImJ, A/J, C3H/HeJ, C57BL/6J, BALB/cJ, DBA/2J, NOD/LtJ, FVB/NJ, WSB/EiJ, PWK/PhJ and CAST/EiJ). Continuous video-tracking observations of sheltering behavior and locomotor activity were segmented into distinguishable behavioral elements, and studied at different time scales, yielding a set of 115 behavioral parameters of which 105 showed highly significant strain differences. This set of 115 parameters was highly dimensional; principal component analysis identified 26 orthogonal components with eigenvalues above one. Especially novel parameters of sheltering behavior and parameters describing aspects of motion of the mouse in the home-cage showed high genetic effect sizes. Multi-day habituation curves and patterns of behavior surrounding dark/light phase transitions showed striking strain differences, albeit with lower genetic effect sizes. This spontaneous home-cage behavior study demonstrates high dimensionality, with a strong genetic contribution to specific sets of behavioral measures. Importantly, spontaneous home-cage behavior analysis detects genetic effects that cannot be studied in conventional behavioral tests, showing that the inclusion of a few days of undisturbed, labor extensive home-cage assessment may greatly aid gene function analyses and drug target discovery.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article numbere108563
    Number of pages9
    JournalPLoS One
    Volume9
    Issue number9
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2014

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