Constant light and single housing alter novelty-induced locomotor activity and sociability in female Swiss Webster mice.

Neuro endocrinology letters Pub Date : 2023-06-14
Fernanda Medeiros Contini, Joseph A Seggio
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Abstract

Objective: Light exposure at night is known to produce behavioral aberrations in both human and animal models. One way to mimic light-at-night is through constant light exposure (LL), wherein animals are placed in an environment where a dark phase never occurs. Additionally, the type of housing condition for the rodents in experiments - grouped-housed vs singly-housed - can produce different behavioral responses, even in female mice. This study investigated whether LL produces alterations to emotionality and sociability, and whether group housing can alleviate some of those negative behavioral outcomes in female mice.

Methods: Female Swiss Webster mice were placed into group or single housing conditions and either into a standard 12:12 light:dark cycle or LL. Novelty-induced (open-field, light-dark box) and circadian locomotor activity, sociability, and serum oxytocin were measured during the middle of the day.

Results: LL and group-housing produced alterations to circadian home-cage activity and increases novelty-induced locomotor activity in the open-field and light-dark box. LL led to increased aggression in both group-housed and single-housed mice, while single-housed/LL mice showed reduced encounters towards the social mouse. Group-housed/LL mice exhibited increased interactions with the empty enclosure. Additionally, both LL and group-housing increased oxytocin levels.

Conclusions: The increase in oxytocin may be a contributing factor to why female mice exhibit increased aggression and other impaired social behaviors in LL. Socialization via group housing was ineffective in reducing the negative sociability seen in mice under LL. These results indicate that aberrant light exposure and circadian misalignment are correlated with impaired social behaviors and emotionality.

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恒定的光照和单一的外壳改变了雌性瑞士韦伯斯特小鼠新奇诱导的运动活动和社交能力。
目的:众所周知,夜间光照会在人类和动物模型中产生行为异常。模拟夜间光线的一种方法是通过持续曝光(LL),将动物置于从不出现暗相的环境中。此外,实验中啮齿动物的居住条件类型——分组居住和单独居住——可以产生不同的行为反应,即使在雌性小鼠中也是如此。这项研究调查了LL是否会改变雌性小鼠的情绪和社交能力,以及集体住房是否可以缓解一些负面行为结果。方法:将雌性Swiss Webster小鼠置于成组或单一饲养条件下,并置于标准的12:12光:暗周期或LL中。在中午测量新奇感诱导(开阔场地、明暗盒)和昼夜节律运动活动、社交能力和血清催产素。结果:LL和集体住房对昼夜节律的家庭笼活动产生了改变,并增加了在开阔地和明暗箱中新奇诱导的运动活动。LL导致组饲养和单饲养小鼠的攻击性增加,而单饲养/LL小鼠对社交小鼠的接触减少。分组饲养/LL小鼠表现出与空围栏的相互作用增加。此外,LL和集体住房都增加了催产素水平。结论:催产素的增加可能是雌性小鼠在LL中表现出攻击性增加和其他社会行为受损的原因之一。通过集体住房进行的社交活动在降低LL小鼠的负面社交能力方面无效。这些结果表明,异常的光照和昼夜节律失调与社会行为和情绪受损有关。
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