Author
Listed:
- Lea Chalfin
(Weizmann Institute of Science)
- Molly Dayan
(Weizmann Institute of Science)
- Dana Rubi Levy
(Weizmann Institute of Science)
- Steven N. Austad
(University of Alabama at Birmingham)
- Richard A. Miller
(University of Michigan School of Medicine)
- Fuad A. Iraqi
(Sackler Faculty of Medicine)
- Catherine Dulac
(Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard University)
- Tali Kimchi
(Weizmann Institute of Science)
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 wild mice with knockout mutant laboratory mice retrieves behavioural traits exhibited exclusively by the wild house mouse, thereby unmasking gene functions inaccessible in the domesticated mutant model. Furthermore, we show that domestication had a much greater impact on females than on males, erasing many behavioural traits of the ancestral wild female. Hence, compared with laboratory mice, wild-derived mutant mice constitute an improved model system to gain insights into neuronal mechanisms underlying normal and pathological sexually dimorphic social behaviours.
Suggested Citation
Lea Chalfin & Molly Dayan & Dana Rubi Levy & Steven N. Austad & Richard A. Miller & Fuad A. Iraqi & Catherine Dulac & Tali Kimchi, 2014.
"Mapping ecologically relevant social behaviours by gene knockout in wild mice,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 5(1), pages 1-10, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:5:y:2014:i:1:d:10.1038_ncomms5569
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5569
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