Abstract
Previous studies revealed that vestibular cues are crucial for exploration in the absence of visual cues. The working hypothesis of this study was, accordingly, that mice with vestibular dysfunction would become disoriented or unable to globally explore an unfamiliar environment. In 2- and 3-month-old mutant headbanger (Hdb) mice, stereocilia of hair cells are abnormally elongated, yet maintain partial staircase arrangement, suggesting some spared vestibular function at these ages. Here we tested a group of 3-month-old mutant Hdb and a group of non-mutant mice obtained from the same litters (Wt mice). Each individual mouse was introduced into a dark 120 cm × 120 cm arena and its behavior was followed for 10 min. Hdb mice were hyperactive and appeared to engage in local exploration, traveling in a restricted zone for a while and then shifting to travel in another zone. In contrast, Wt mice traveled across zones incessantly with fewer visits to recently entered zones. Thus, Hdb seemed to display local compared with the global exploration of Wt mice, indicating that they were less oriented in the global environment. In addition, Hdb exhibited numerous stretch-attends, which is suggested as a sign of elevated anxiety. Altogether, the three comorbidities of hyperactivity, anxiety, and disorientation can be presented as a syndrome associated with vestibular deficiency in this animal model, and serve in studying vestibular deficiency in humans.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 210-217 |
| Number of pages | 8 |
| Journal | Behavioural Brain Research |
| Volume | 202 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 14 Sep 2009 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:This research was supported by the Israel Science Foundation, Grant 471/04 (D.E.), by the European Commission FP6 Integrated Projects EUROHEAR LSHG-CT-20054-512063 and EUMODIC 037188 (K.B.A.) and by European Commission grant “Synthetic Forager” FP7-ICT – 217148 (M.M.). We would like to thank Dr. Martin Hrabé de Angelis and Dr. Helmut Fuchs (Helmholtz Zentrum München, Germany) for their continued support to study the Headbanger mice, Dr. Ronna Hertzano for contributing at the start of the project and Dr. Agnieszka Rzadzinska for helpful comments.
Funding
This research was supported by the Israel Science Foundation, Grant 471/04 (D.E.), by the European Commission FP6 Integrated Projects EUROHEAR LSHG-CT-20054-512063 and EUMODIC 037188 (K.B.A.) and by European Commission grant “Synthetic Forager” FP7-ICT – 217148 (M.M.). We would like to thank Dr. Martin Hrabé de Angelis and Dr. Helmut Fuchs (Helmholtz Zentrum München, Germany) for their continued support to study the Headbanger mice, Dr. Ronna Hertzano for contributing at the start of the project and Dr. Agnieszka Rzadzinska for helpful comments.
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| European Commission FP6 | EUMODIC 037188, EUROHEAR LSHG-CT-20054-512063 |
| Seventh Framework Programme | 217148 |
| European Commission | |
| Israel Science Foundation | 471/04 |
Keywords
- Genetics
- Idiothetic cues
- Navigation
- Open-field
- Path-integration
- Vestibular mutation
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