| Literature DB >> 34548608 |
Anna S Ratuski1, I Joanna Makowska2, Kaitlyn R Dvorack2, Daniel M Weary2.
Abstract
Laboratory mice are typically housed in "shoebox" cages that limit the expression of natural behaviours. Temporary access to more complex environments (playpens) may improve their welfare. We aimed to assess if access to playpens is rewarding for conventionally-housed mice and to document mouse behaviour during playpen access. Female C57BL/6J, BALB/cJ, and DBA/2J mice were provided temporary access to a large enriched playpen three times per week; control mice remained in their home cages. We measured latency to enter playpens and anticipatory behaviour to determine if access was rewarding, and recorded mouse behaviour during playpen sessions. Over time, playpen mice entered the playpen more quickly; latency declined from 168 ± 22 to 13 ± 2 s over the 14-d trial. As expected, playpen mice showed an increase in anticipatory behaviour before playpen access (mean ± SE = 19.7 ± 2.6 behavioural transitions), while control mice showed no change in anticipatory behaviour relative to baseline values (2.4 ± 1.6 transitions). Mice in the playpen performed more ambulatory behaviours than control mice who remained in home cages (21.5 ± 0.7 vs 6.9 ± 1.1 observations of 25 total observations). We conclude that conventionally-housed mice find voluntary playpen access rewarding, and suggest this as a useful option for providing laboratory mice with access to more complex environments.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34548608 PMCID: PMC8455539 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98356-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Playpen design. Two rat cages were connected via a clear tunnel. The cage on the left side contains burrowing substrate, a triangular shelter made of black corrugated plastic positioned within the substrate, and a plastic upper mezzanine with an opaque tunnel. The cage on the right contains structural enrichment items: a wheel (14 cm diameter; Kaytee Comfort Wheel, Petsmart, Canada), plastic tunnel (9.8 cm long, Bio-Serv), climbing and shelter structures (Playmobil Park Playground; cube structure made from magnetic PicassoTiles; USA), wood chip bedding, paper nesting material (Enviro-Dri), and plastic netting and hoops suspended from the lid for climbing. Photo provided by ASR.
Ethogram used for anticipatory behaviour analysis.
| Behaviour | Description |
|---|---|
| In hut | Head and body are inside hut |
| On hut | All four paws on top of hut |
| Locomotion | Moves forward, all paws moving |
| Sitting | All paws on the ground, not moving forward or backward, may be sniffing |
| Rear | Both front paws and upper body raised, unsupported or leaning on wall |
| Rear move | Moves both raised front paws from one position to another |
| Rear hut | Standing on hut with front paws and upper body raised |
| In nest | Head and body are covered by nesting material |
| Social sniff | Nose contacts another mouse |
| Stretched posture | Upper body stretched forward and raised, posterior body is low to ground |
| Nesting | Modifying or burrowing in nest material |
| Out of view | Unable to see mouse and identify behaviour |
Ethogram used for scan sampling and focal sampling observations.
| Description | Activity category | |
|---|---|---|
| Affiliative grooming | Licks fur of another mouse or grooms with front paws, includes both giving and receiving grooming. Recipient mouse is not pinned or held down by groomer | Non-ambulatory |
| Chewing | Bites on an object other than food or cage bars | Non-ambulatory |
| Eating or drinking | Mouse drinks from water bottle or gnaws on food in hopper or cage floor | Non-ambulatory |
| Grooming | Licks, scratches, or manipulates fur | Non-ambulatory |
| In shelter, out of view | Unable to see mouse and identify behaviour; in control cages this meant the mouse was fully inside the nest or the hut, while in the playpen this meant the mouse was inside the structure under the burrowing substrate | Non-ambulatory |
| Nesting | Modifying or manipulating any nesting material with paws or mouth | Non-ambulatory |
| Resting | Sitting or sleeping alone or with other mice, no movement | Non-ambulatory |
| Sniff | Mouse is seated or immobile with nose elevated and sniffing, or nose contacts another mouse | Non-ambulatory |
| Stretched/alert posture | Head of mouse is raised, appears alert, body remains low to ground | Non-ambulatory |
| Agonistic interactions | Encompasses any agonistic behaviours, including chasing, fighting, pinning, anogenital sniffing, and mounting | Ambulatory |
| Climbing | Body is suspended from the wire lid, plastic netting, or vertical playground structure in the playpen; mouse is held up by two or four paws, all four paws are off the floor | Ambulatory |
| Digging | Mouse engages front and/or back legs in manipulating burrowing substrate or cage bedding | Ambulatory |
| Frisky | Sudden bouncy hops, skips or erratic locomotion | Ambulatory |
| Harassed | Mouse is recipient of agonistic behaviour such as being attacked, mounted, pinned, or chased by another mouse | Ambulatory |
| Rear | Mouse is on hind paws with both front paws and upper body raised | Ambulatory |
| Running | Moves forward locomotion at a fast pace with all paws moving | Ambulatory |
| Stereotypic behaviour | Includes all identifiable stereotypies such as backflipping, bar biting, route tracing, or repetitive circling or twirling on the cage lid; descriptions based on[ | Ambulatory |
| Swing | Mouse has at least two paws on swing and the swing is in motion | Ambulatory |
| Walking | Moves forward walking, locomotion at a slow or moderate pace | Ambulatory |
| Wheel use | Moves all paws while on the wheel | Ambulatory |
| Pinning/boxing | Mouse pins down another mouse or mice are pushing each other with forearms | |
| Chasing | Mouse pursues another mouse | |
| Rough grooming | Mouse pins down another mouse and vigorously grooms hair | |
| Mounting | Mouse attempts to mount and perform pelvic thrusts on another mouse | |
| Displacement | Mouse pushes or supplants another mouse from a resource | |
| Anogenital investigation | Mouse persistently pushes or sniffs another mouse’s anogenital region | |
| Fighting | Mice are locked together rolling around quickly, kicking, biting, or wrestling; mice involved in fights will both be labeled as aggressor | |
| Receiving aggression | Mouse is the recipient of any forms of aggression listed above | |
(a) The ethogram for scan sampling observations is listed first and was adapted from Makowska et al.[26] and Draper[27]. (b) For focal sampling of agonistic interactions of the playpen mice on days 30–33, only agonistic behaviours listed in the lower half of the table were scored (adapted from Nip et al.[11]).
Figure 2Latency (s) for each mouse to voluntarily enter the playpen. Mice are shown as individual points (horizontally jittered to avoid fully overlapping points) while genetic strains are shown in different colours. Lines depict model output; note that the quadratic term was included for all three lines for consistency in visualization, but for the BALB mice the quadratic term was not significant. The maximum possible latency was 300 s. Seven mice were tested of each strain.
Figure 3Change in anticipatory behaviour (mean behavioural frequency/min) from baseline (day 1) to experimental days (average of day 8–14). The plot shows LS means and standard error generated by the mixed model; n = 42 mice (14 mice per strain) and 7 cages per treatment.
Figure 4Mean (± SE) frequency of each behaviour observed during scan sampling. Behaviours are divided into the overall categories of ambulatory and non-ambulatory activity. Mice were observed 5 times per day for 5 d for a total of 25 scans per mouse; n = 42 mice, with 7 cages per treatment.
Figure 5Mean frequency of agonistic behaviours observed in the playpens, shown separately by strain. Panel (A) shows behaviours according to aggressor strain while C57 mice were present. Panel (B) shows behaviours according to recipient strain with C57 mice present. Panel (C) shows aggressors with C57 mice absent, and Panel (D) shows recipients with C57 mice absent. C57 mice were present for two trials and absent for two trials. “AG sniff” stands for anogenital sniffing, and “R. groom” stands for rough grooming. Note that when mice were fighting, the mice involved were labelled as both the aggressor and the recipient. n = 21 mice, with 7 mice of each strain.