visitant ::
identificació
|
|||||||||||||||
Cerca | Lliura | Ajuda | Servei de Biblioteques | Sobre el DDD | Català English Español |
Pàgina inicial > Articles > Articles publicats > Conservation of Phenotypes in the Roman High- and Low-Avoidance Rat Strains After Embryo Transfer |
Data: | 2017 |
Resum: | The Roman high- (RHA-I) and low-avoidance (RLA-I) rat strains are bi-directionally bred for their good versus non-acquisition of two-way active avoidance, respectively. They have recently been re-derived through embryo transfer (ET) to Sprague-Dawley females to generate specific pathogen free (SPF) RHA-I/RLA-I rats. Offspring were phenotyped at generations 1 (G1, born from Sprague-Dawley females), 3 and 5 (G3 and G5, born from RHA-I and RLA-I from G2-G4, respectively), and compared with generation 60 from our non-SPF colony. Phenotyping included two-way avoidance acquisition, context-conditioned fear, open-field behaviour, novelty-seeking, baseline startle, pre-pulse inhibition (PPI) and stress-induced increase in plasma corticosterone concentration. Post-ET between-strain differences in avoidance acquisition, context-conditioned freezing and novelty-induced self-grooming are conserved. Other behavioural traits (i. e. hole-board head-dipping, novel object exploration, open-field activity, startle, PPI) differentiate the strains at G3-G5 but not at G1, suggesting that the pre-/post-natal environment may have influenced these co-segregated traits at G1, though further selection pressure along the subsequent generations (G1-G5) rescues the typical strain-related differences. |
Ajuts: | Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad PSI2013-41872-P Agència de Gestió d'Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca 2014SGR-1587 |
Drets: | Tots els drets reservats. |
Llengua: | Anglès |
Document: | Article ; recerca ; Versió acceptada per publicar |
Matèria: | Behavioural phenotyping ; Embryo transfer ; Roman rat strains ; Stress-induced corticosterone ; Two-way active avoidance |
Publicat a: | Behavior Genetics, Vol. 47 N. 5 (2017) , p. 537-555, ISSN 1573-3297 |
Postprint 58 p, 1.1 MB |