Adult Offspring of Deer Mouse Breeding Pairs Selected for Normal and Compulsive‐Like Large Nesting Expression Invariably Show the Same Behavior Without Prior In‐Breeding

Author:

Stoppel Heike1,Harvey Brian H.123,Wolmarans De Wet1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Health Sciences Centre of Excellence for Pharmaceutical Sciences North‐West University Potchefstroom South Africa

2. Department of Psychiatry and Neuroscience Institute South African Medical Research Council Unit on Risk and Resilience in Mental Disorders University of Cape Town Rondebosch South Africa

3. School of Medicine, Institute for Mental and Physical Health and Clinical Translation Deakin University and Barwon Health Geelong Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACTObsessive‐compulsive disorder is a neuropsychiatric condition with notable genetic involvement. Against this background, laboratory‐housed deer mice of both sexes varyingly present with excessive and persistent large nesting behavior (LNB), which has been validated for its resemblance of clinical compulsivity. Although LNB differs from normal nesting behavior (NNB) on both a biological and cognitive level, it is unknown to what extent the expression of LNB and NNB is related to familial background. Here, we randomly selected 14 NNB‐ and 14 LNB‐expressing mice (equally distributed between sexes) to constitute 7 breeding pairs of each phenotype. Pairs were allowed to breed two successive generations of offspring, which were raised until adulthood (12 weeks) and assessed for nesting expression. Remarkably, our findings show that offspring from LNB‐expressing pairs build significantly larger nests compared to offspring from NNB‐expressing pairs and the nesting expression of the offspring of each breeding pair, irrespective of parental phenotype or litter, is family specific. Collectively, the results of this investigation indicate that LNB can be explored for its potential to shed light on heritable neurocognitive mechanisms that may underlie the expression of specific persistent behavioral phenotypes.

Publisher

Wiley

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