Sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.

Bipolar disorders are heritable psychiatric conditions often abstracted by separate animal models for mania and depression. The principal mania models involve transgenic manipulations or treatment with stimulants. An additional approach involves analysis of naturally occurring mania models including...

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Main Authors: Michael C Saul, Sharon A Stevenson, Stephen C Gammie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23967278/pdf/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-993e44d086b2499c92169cdb5669616c2021-03-03T20:21:02ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0188e7212510.1371/journal.pone.0072125Sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.Michael C SaulSharon A StevensonStephen C GammieBipolar disorders are heritable psychiatric conditions often abstracted by separate animal models for mania and depression. The principal mania models involve transgenic manipulations or treatment with stimulants. An additional approach involves analysis of naturally occurring mania models including an inbred strain our lab has recently characterized, the Madison (MSN) mouse strain. These mice show a suite of behavioral and neural genetic alterations analogous to manic aspects of bipolar disorders. In the current study, we extended the MSN strain's behavioral phenotype in new directions by examining in-cage locomotor activity. We found that MSN activity presentation is sexually dimorphic, with MSN females showing higher in-cage activity than MSN males. When investigating development, we found that MSN mice display stable locomotor hyperactivity already observable when first assayed at 28 days postnatal. Using continuous monitoring and analysis for 1 month, we did not find evidence of spontaneous bipolarism in MSN mice. However, we did find that the MSN strain displayed an altered diurnal activity profile, getting up earlier and going to sleep earlier than control mice. Long photoperiods were associated with increased in-cage activity in MSN, but not in the control strain. The results of these experiments reinforce the face validity of the MSN strain as a complex mania model, adding sexual dimorphism, an altered diurnal activity profile, and seasonality to the suite of interesting dispositional phenomena related to mania seen in MSN mice.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23967278/pdf/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael C Saul
Sharon A Stevenson
Stephen C Gammie
spellingShingle Michael C Saul
Sharon A Stevenson
Stephen C Gammie
Sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michael C Saul
Sharon A Stevenson
Stephen C Gammie
author_sort Michael C Saul
title Sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.
title_short Sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.
title_full Sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.
title_fullStr Sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.
title_full_unstemmed Sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.
title_sort sexually dimorphic, developmental, and chronobiological behavioral profiles of a mouse mania model.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Bipolar disorders are heritable psychiatric conditions often abstracted by separate animal models for mania and depression. The principal mania models involve transgenic manipulations or treatment with stimulants. An additional approach involves analysis of naturally occurring mania models including an inbred strain our lab has recently characterized, the Madison (MSN) mouse strain. These mice show a suite of behavioral and neural genetic alterations analogous to manic aspects of bipolar disorders. In the current study, we extended the MSN strain's behavioral phenotype in new directions by examining in-cage locomotor activity. We found that MSN activity presentation is sexually dimorphic, with MSN females showing higher in-cage activity than MSN males. When investigating development, we found that MSN mice display stable locomotor hyperactivity already observable when first assayed at 28 days postnatal. Using continuous monitoring and analysis for 1 month, we did not find evidence of spontaneous bipolarism in MSN mice. However, we did find that the MSN strain displayed an altered diurnal activity profile, getting up earlier and going to sleep earlier than control mice. Long photoperiods were associated with increased in-cage activity in MSN, but not in the control strain. The results of these experiments reinforce the face validity of the MSN strain as a complex mania model, adding sexual dimorphism, an altered diurnal activity profile, and seasonality to the suite of interesting dispositional phenomena related to mania seen in MSN mice.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23967278/pdf/?tool=EBI
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