| Literature DB >> 27619417 |
Dong An1, Wei Chen1, De-Qin Yu1, Shi-Wei Wang2, Wei-Zhi Yu1, Hong Xu1, Dong-Mei Wang1, Dan Zhao1, Yi-Ping Sun1, Jun-Cheng Wu1, Yi-Yuan Tang3, Sheng-Ming Yin1.
Abstract
Both Kunming (KM) mice and BALB/c mice have been widely used as rodent models to investigate stress-associated mental diseases. However, little is known about the different behaviors of KM mice and BALB/c mice after social isolation, particularly cognitive and aggressive behaviors. In this study, the behaviors of KM and BALB/c mice isolated for 2, 4 and 8 weeks and age-matched controls were evaluated using object recognition, object location and resident-intruder tests. The recovery of behavioral deficits by re-socialization was also examined for the isolated mice in adolescence. Our study showed that isolation for 2, 4 and 8 weeks led to cognitive deficits and increased aggressiveness for both KM and BALB/c mice. An important finding is that re-socialization could completely recover spatial/non-spatial cognitive deficits resulted from social isolation for both KM and BALB/c mice. In addition, age only impacted aggressiveness of KM mice. Moreover, isolation duration showed different impacts on cognitive and aggressive behaviors for both KM and BALB/c mice. Furthermore, BALB/c mice showed weak spatial/non-spatial memory and low aggressiveness when they were at the same age and isolation duration, compared to KM mice. In conclusion, KM mice and BALB/c mice behaved characteristically under physiology and isolation conditions.Entities:
Keywords: BALB/c mice; behavior; kunming mice; social isolation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27619417 DOI: 10.1111/asj.12688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Sci J ISSN: 1344-3941 Impact factor: 1.749