2014
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5569
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Mapping ecologically relevant social behaviours by gene knockout in wild mice

Abstract: The laboratory mouse serves as an important model system for studying gene, brain and behavioural interactions. Powerful methods of gene targeting have helped to decipher gene-function associations in human diseases. Yet, the laboratory mouse, obtained after decades of human-driven artificial selection, inbreeding, and adaptation to captivity, is of limited use for the study of fitness-driven behavioural responses that characterize the ancestral wild house mouse. Here, we demonstrate that the backcrossing of w… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(94 citation statements)
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“…In this connection, the sex bias in the domestication process resulted in the loss of intrasexual aggression, reproductive competition and exploratory behaviors mostly in females of laboratory strains. This implies that domestication processes may have impacted females more than males and eroded many behavioral traits of ancestral wild female mice, as also reported in a recent study by Chalfin et al (2014).…”
Section: Artificial Selection and Laboratory Strains: Which Mouse Is mentioning
confidence: 61%
“…In this connection, the sex bias in the domestication process resulted in the loss of intrasexual aggression, reproductive competition and exploratory behaviors mostly in females of laboratory strains. This implies that domestication processes may have impacted females more than males and eroded many behavioral traits of ancestral wild female mice, as also reported in a recent study by Chalfin et al (2014).…”
Section: Artificial Selection and Laboratory Strains: Which Mouse Is mentioning
confidence: 61%
“…It is also clear that inbred mice can differentiate between familiars and strangers, because social phenomena such as emotional contagion have been shown to be more pronounced between C57BL/ 6 cagemates than between strangers (21). Dramatic phenotypic (especially stress-related) and gene expression differences between mutants placed on C57BL/6 ("domesticated") versus rederived wild mice have been reported recently (14).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Laboratory mouse strains are poor representatives of the species in at least three ways: (i) they are genetically homozygous at every locus; (ii) they have been artificially selected for both tameness and reproductive success under laboratory conditions; and (iii) postweaning same-sex housing deprives them of an ethologically relevant social environment. Robust differences in stress and social behaviors between inbred mice and wild mice have been reported (12)(13)(14). We thus evaluated TCOT behavior in outbred, inbred, and wild-derived mice.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, any other phenotypic difference (e.g. variation in daily activity schedules or microhabitat use) arising between captive and wild parents that reduced mating opportunities post-release could further limit frequency of mixed-origin mating [18].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%