| Literature DB >> 35205157 |
Gerald Zernig1, Hussein Ghareh1, Helena Berchtold1.
Abstract
Rats, including those of the Sprague Dawley strain, may kill mice. Because of this muricidal behavior, it is standard practice in many research animal housing facilities to separate mice from rats (i.e., the predators) to minimize stress for the mice. We tested the effect of cohousing on the stress levels of mice from either the C57BL/6J (BL6) or the CD1 strain and Sprague Dawley rats (SD rat) by quantifying their fecal corticosterone and metabolites (FCM) concentration. We also investigated cohousing impacts a behavioral assay, i.e., conditioned place preference for intragenus (i.e., mouse-mouse or rat-rat) dyadic social interaction (DSI CPP) that was shown be sensitive to social factors, especially to handling by humans. We found that the two delivery batches of BL6 mice or SD rats, respectively, had different stress levels at delivery that were statistically significant for the BL6 mice. Even so, the BL6 mice cohoused with rats had significantly increased FCM concentrations, indicative of higher stress levels, as compared to (1) BL6 mice housed alone or (2) BL6 mice at delivery. In contrast to their elevated stress levels, the attractiveness of contextual cues associated with mouse-mouse social interaction (DSI CPP) even increased in rat-cohoused BL6 mice, albeit non-significantly. Thus, cohousing BL6 mice and rats did not impair a behavioral assay in BL6 mice that was proven to be sensitive to handling stress by humans in our laboratory. SD rats cohoused with BL6- or CD1 mice, and CD1 mice cohoused with SD rats, showed DSI CPP that was not different from our previously published data on SD rats and BL6 mice of the Jackson- or NIH substrain obtained in the absence of cohousing. CD1 mice cohoused with rats did not show an increased FCM concentration compared to delivery. Our findings suggest that the effect of cohousing rats and mice under the conditions described above on their stress levels as opposed to their behavior might be less clearcut than generally assumed and might be overriden by conditions that cannot be controlled, i.e., different deliveries. Our findings can help to use research animal housing resources, which are usually limited, more efficiently.Entities:
Keywords: C57BL/6J mouse; CD1 mouse; Sprague Dawley rat; cohousing; conditioned place preference; cortisol; dyadic social interaction; fecal corticosterone and metabolites; stress
Year: 2022 PMID: 35205157 PMCID: PMC8869709 DOI: 10.3390/biology11020291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Figure 1Social interaction between two male C57BL/6J mice during conditioned place preference (CPP) training. Shown is a single frame of a video recording of a conditioning session. The social interaction partners are confined to the conditioning compartment (all sliding doors between the middle/neutral chamber and the conditioning compartments closed). To prevent the mice from jumping out of the CPP apparatus, regular wire mesh cage tops are put on top of the conditioning compartments (spout guard and inverted pellet trough visible). The different floors and wallpaper patterns of the two conditioning compartments can be clearly distinguished.
Stress levels quantified by FCM concentrations at delivery and after the mouse–mouse DSI CPP test. t tests were 2-sided and either homo- or heteroskedastic as appropriate. Shown are FCM concentrations in nmol/l: na, not available; nj, not justified statistically.
| Experimental Group | FCM at Delivery | FCM after CPP Test |
|---|---|---|
| Mouse BL6 alone ( | 50 ± 7 | 31 ± 8 |
| Mouse BL6 cohoused | 33 ± 4 | 74 ± 8 |
| Mouse BL6 pooled ( | 41 ± 4 | nj |
| Mouse CD1 alone | na | na |
| Mouse CD1 cohoused | 49 ± 11 | 54 ± 11 |
| Rat SD alone | na | na |
| Rat SD cohoused | 285 ± 83 | 479 ± 197 |
| Rat SD cohoused | 475 ± 89 | 342 ± 50 |
| Rat SD pooled ( | 380 ± 64 | 410 ± 100 |
Conditioned place preference for dyadic social interaction in mice housed alone or cohoused with rats, and in rats. Of note, the dyadic social interaction was always intragenus, i.e., mouse–mouse or rat–rat. The table shows the times (in seconds, means ± SEM; group size was always 8 animals) spent in the compartment previously associated with dyadic social interaction following an i.p. saline injection (DSI) or saline injection alone (sal). Neu, a neutral compartment located between the conditioning compartments. Time spent in the DSI compartment was statistically compared to time spent in the sal compartment within each group for each animal assuming a CPP for DSI (i.e., one-sided unpaired t-test). Across-group statistical comparisons for DSI-sal were performed with a two-sided unpaired t-test. For better transparency, DSI-sal is shown here as the difference between the rounded mean values. For statistical comparisons, the DSI-sal difference was calculated for each individual animal, thus leading to a mean rounded DSI-sal of 56 s (vs. 55 s) for the BL6 group and of 192 s (vs. 191 s) for the rat cohoused with the mouse CD1 group.
| Experimental Group | Time Spent | Time Spent | Time Spent in | DSI-Sal (s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse BL6 alone | 321 ± 37 | 313 ± 14 | 266 ± 37 ( | 55 |
| Mouse BL6 cohoused | 346 ± 31 | 320 ± 28 | 234 ± 18 ( | 112 |
| Mouse CD1 alone | na | na | na | na |
| Mouse CD1 cohoused | 392 ± 24 | 251 ± 24 | 258 ± 23 ( | 134 |
| Rat SD alone | na | na | na | na |
| Rat SD cohoused | 362 ± 27 | 288 ± 35 | 251 ± 35 ( | 111 |
| Rat SD cohoused | 428 ± 31 | 235 ± 18 | 237 ± 31 ( | 191 |
Correlation between stress levels quantified by FCM and intragenus (i.e., mouse–mouse or rat–rat) dyadic social interaction as a behavioral measure of stress. na, not available.
| Experimental Group | Correlation between | Correlation between |
|---|---|---|
| Mouse BL6 alone ( | −0.47 | 0.17 |
| Mouse BL6 cohoused | −0.29 | 0.04 |
| Mouse BL6 pooled ( | -0.45 | 0.21 |
| Mouse CD1 alone | na | na |
| Mouse CD1 cohoused | 0.63 | 0.29 |
| Rat SD alone | na | na |
| Rat SD cohoused | −0.28 | 0.36 |
| Rat SD cohoused | 0.76 | 0.73 |
| Rat SD pooled ( | 0.36 | 0.30 |