Literature DB >> 7598668

A comparison between house mouse lines selected for attack latency or nest-building: evidence for a genetic basis of alternative behavioral strategies.

F Sluyter1, A Bult, C B Lynch, G A van Oortmerssen, J M Koolhaas.   

Abstract

House mouse lines bidirectionally selected for either nest-building behavior or attack latency were tested for both attack latency and nest-building behavior under identical conditions. Male mice selected for high nest-building behavior had shorter attack latencies, i.e., were more aggressive, than those selected for low nest-building behavior and their randomly bred control lines. Conversely, male wild house mice selected for short attack latency showed more nest-building behavior than those selected for long attack latency when tested at 110 days of age. These findings imply a common genetic basis for control of aggression and nesting and support earlier proposals as to how animals may exhibit fundamentally different responses to environmental challenges, either reacting actively to aversive situations (aggressive and high-nesting animals: active copers) or adopting a passive strategy (nonaggressive and low-nesting animals: passive copers).

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7598668     DOI: 10.1007/BF02197183

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Genet        ISSN: 0001-8244            Impact factor:   2.805


  12 in total

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Review 2.  Heritable variation for aggression as a reflection of individual coping strategies.

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8.  The effects of castration and Silastic implants of testosterone on intermale aggression in the mouse.

Authors:  M S Barkley; B D Goldman
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9.  Artificial selection for short and long attack latencies in wild Mus musculus domesticus.

Authors:  G A van Oortmerssen; T C Bakker
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10.  Circadian rhythms differ between selected mouse lines: a model to study the role of vasopressin neurons in the suprachiasmatic nuclei.

Authors:  A Bult; L Hiestand; E A Van der Zee; C B Lynch
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  14 in total

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3.  Studies on wild house mice. VII. Prenatal maternal environment and aggression.

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Review 10.  Out of the bottleneck: the Diversity Outcross and Collaborative Cross mouse populations in behavioral genetics research.

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