LSID: http://syli.cz/urn:lsid:public.sylics.com:experiment:4D68-9568-G5A3
Treatment | Amount | Administration route | Administration time |
Treatment info:
Order of behavioural testing
Acoustic Startle Response and Prepulse Inhibition
Published in Biological Psychiatry 2015:
http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0006322315000876
Genetic mapping in mice reveals the involvement of Pcdh9 in long-term social and object recognition, and sensorimotor development
Hilgo Bruining (a, b), Asuka Matsui (c), Asami Oguro-Ando (a), René S. Kahn (b), Heleen M. van t Spijker (a), Guus Akkermans (a), Oliver Stiedl (d), Herman van Engeland (b), Bastijn Koopmans (e), Hein A. van Lith (f), Hugo Oppelaar (a), Liselotte Tieland (a), Lourens J. Nonkes (a), Takeshi Yagi (g), Ryosuke Kaneko (g), J. Peter H. Burbach (a), Nobuhiko Yamamoto (c), Martien J. Kas (a)
a Department of Translational Neuroscience, Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands
b Department of Psychiatry, Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands
c Neuroscience Laboratories, Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan
d Center for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam, VU University Amsterdam
e Sylics (Synaptologics BV), Amsterdam, The Netherlands
f Division of Animal Welfare & Laboratory Animal Science, Department of Animals in Science and Society, Program Emotion and Cognition, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
g KOKORO-Biology Group, Laboratories for Integrated Biology, Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.
Abstract
Background
Quantitative genetic analysis of basic mouse behaviors is a powerful tool to identify novel genetic phenotypes contributing to neurobehavioral disorders. Here, we analyzed genetic contributions to single-trial, long-term social and nonsocial recognition and subsequently studied the functional impact of an identified candidate gene on behavioral development.
Methods
Genetic mapping of single-trial social recognition was performed in chromosome substitution strains, a sophisticated tool for detecting quantitative trait loci (QTL) of complex traits. Follow-up occurred by generating and testing knockout (KO) mice of a selected QTL candidate gene. Functional characterization of these mice was performed through behavioral and neurological assessments across developmental stages and analyses of gene expression and brain morphology.
Results
Chromosome substitution strain 14 mapping studies revealed an overlapping QTL related to long-term social and object recognition harboring Pcdh9, a cell-adhesion gene previously associated with autism spectrum disorder. Specific long-term social and object recognition deficits were confirmed in homozygous (KO) Pcdh9-deficient mice, while heterozygous mice only showed long-term social recognition impairment. The recognition deficits in KO mice were not associated with alterations in perception, multi-trial discrimination learning, sociability, behavioral flexibility, or fear memory. Rather, KO mice showed additional impairments in sensorimotor development reflected by early touch-evoked biting, rotarod performance, and sensory gating deficits. This profile emerged with structural changes in deep layers of sensory cortices, where Pcdh9 is selectively expressed.
Conclusions
This behavior-to-gene study implicates Pcdh9 in cognitive functions required for long-term social and nonsocial recognition. This role is supported by the involvement of Pcdh9 in sensory cortex development and sensorimotor phenotypes.
Mouse info:
Mouse ID | Strain | Coat color | Genotype | Ear tag | Internal ID | Sex | Date of Birth | Sub experiment 1 | Sub experiment 2 | Sub experiment 3 |
PH11755 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1063 | male | 17-03-2014 | ||||
PH11756 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1061 | male | 17-03-2014 | ||||
PH11757 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1065 | male | 17-03-2014 | ||||
PH11758 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1066 | male | 17-03-2014 | ||||
PH11759 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1071 | male | 31-03-2014 | ||||
PH11760 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1072 | male | 31-03-2014 | ||||
PH11761 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1073 | male | 31-03-2014 | ||||
PH11762 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1074 | male | 31-03-2014 | ||||
PH11763 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 1080 | male | 15-04-2014 | ||||
PH11764 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1082 | male | 15-04-2014 | ||||
PH11765 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1083 | male | 15-04-2014 | ||||
PH11766 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1091 | male | 16-04-2014 | ||||
PH11767 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1092 | male | 16-04-2014 | ||||
PH11768 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1095 | male | 26-04-2014 | ||||
PH11769 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1096 | male | 26-04-2014 | ||||
PH11770 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1097 | male | 26-04-2014 | ||||
PH11771 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 1098 | male | 26-04-2014 | ||||
PH11772 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1103 | male | 28-04-2014 | ||||
PH11773 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 1104 | male | 28-04-2014 | ||||
PH11774 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 1116 | male | 28-05-2014 | ||||
PH11775 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 1117 | male | 28-05-2014 | ||||
PH11776 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1119 | male | 28-05-2014 | ||||
PH11777 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 1120 | male | 28-05-2014 | ||||
PH11778 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 1132 | male | 01-06-2014 | ||||
PH11779 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1133 | male | 17-06-2014 | ||||
PH11780 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1134 | male | 17-06-2014 | ||||
PH11781 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1136 | male | 17-06-2014 | ||||
PH11782 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1140 | male | 18-06-2014 | ||||
PH11783 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1141 | male | 18-06-2014 | ||||
PH11784 | Pcdh9 | black | hom | 1142 | male | 18-06-2014 | ||||
PH11785 | Pcdh9 | black | hetro | 1143 | male | 18-06-2014 | ||||
PH11786 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 476 | male | 04-05-2014 | ||||
PH11787 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 477 | male | 04-05-2014 | ||||
PH11788 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 489 | male | 16-06-2014 | ||||
PH11789 | Pcdh9 | black | WT | 490 | male | 16-06-2014 |