4.2 Article

High-throughput phenotyping of avoidance learning in mice discriminates different genotypes and identifies a novel gene

Journal

GENES BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages 772-784

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1601-183X.2012.00820.x

Keywords

Avoidance learning; behavioral flexibility; common inbred; high-throughput behavioral screening; home cage; SPECC1

Funding

  1. Agentschap NL (NeuroBSIK Mouse Phenomics Consortium) [BSIK03053]
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [Pionier/VICI900-01-001, ZonMW 903-42-095, VENI-451-08-025, VIDI-016-065-318]
  3. European Union [HEALTH-F2-2009-241498, HEALTH-F2-2009-242167]

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Recognizing and avoiding aversive situations are central aspects of mammalian cognition. These abilities are essential for health and survival and are expected to have a prominent genetic basis. We modeled these abilities in eight common mouse inbred strains covering similar to 75% of the species' natural variation and in gene-trap mice (>2000 mice), using an unsupervised, automated assay with an instrumented home cage (PhenoTyper) containing a shelter with two entrances. Mice visited this shelter for 201200 times/24 h and 71% of all mice developed a significant and often strong preference for one entrance. Subsequently, a mild aversive stimulus (shelter illumination) was automatically delivered when mice used their preferred entrance. Different genotypes developed different coping strategies. Firstly, the number of entries via the preferred entrance decreased in DBA/2J, C57BL/6J and 129S1/SvImJ, indicating that these genotypes associated one specific entrance with the aversive stimulus. Secondly, mice started sleeping outside (C57BL/6J, DBA/2J), indicating they associated the shelter, in general, with the aversive stimulus. Some mice showed no evidence for an association between the entrance and the aversive light, but did show markedly shorter shelter residence times in response to illumination, indicating they did perceive illumination as aversive. Finally, using this assay, we screened 43 different mutants, which yielded a novel gene, specc1/cytospinB. This mutant showed profound and specific delay in avoidance learning. Together, these data suggest that different genotypes express distinct learning and/or memory of associations between shelter entrance and aversive stimuli, and that specc1/cytospinB is involved in this aspect of cognition.

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