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  3. Handling method affects measures of anxiety, but not chronic stress in mice.
 

Handling method affects measures of anxiety, but not chronic stress in mice.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/175467
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41598-022-25090-9
PubMed ID
36463282
Description
Studies in mice have shown that less aversive handling methods (e.g. tunnel or cup handling) can reduce behavioural measures of anxiety in comparison to picking mice up by their tail. Despite such evidence, tail handling continues to be used routinely. Besides resistance to change accustomed procedures, this may also be due to the fact that current evidence in support of less aversive handling is mostly restricted to effects of extensive daily handling, which may not apply to routine husbandry practices. The aim of our study was to assess whether, and to what extent, different handling methods during routine husbandry induce differences in behavioural and physiological measures of stress in laboratory mice. To put the effects of handling method in perspective with chronic stress, we compared handling methods to a validated paradigm of unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS). We housed mice of two strains (Balb/c and C57BL/6) and both sexes either under standard laboratory conditions (CTRL) or under UCMS. Half of the animals from each housing condition were tail handled and half were tunnel handled twice per week, once during a cage change and once for a routine health check. We found strain dependent effects of handling method on behavioural measures of anxiety: tunnel handled Balb/c mice interacted with the handler more than tail handled conspecifics, and tunnel handled CTRL mice showed increased open arm exploration in the elevated plus-maze. Mice undergoing UCMS showed increased plasma corticosterone levels and reduced sucrose preference. However, we found no effect of handling method on these stress-associated measures. Our results therefore indicate that routine tail handling can affect behavioural measures of anxiety, but may not be a significant source of chronic husbandry stress. Our results also highlight strain dependent responses to handling methods.
Date of Publication
2022-12-03
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 630 Agriculture
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Novak, Janja
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Jaric, Ivanaorcid-logo
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Rosso, Marianna
VPH-Institut der Universität Bern
Rufener, Reto
Institut für Parasitologie (IPA)
Touma, Chadi
Würbel, Hannoorcid-logo
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Additional Credits
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
VPH-Institut der Universität Bern
Institut für Parasitologie (IPA)
Series
Scientific Reports
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
2045-2322
Access(Rights)
open.access
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