Exploration, Emotionality, and Hippocampal Mossy Fibers in Nonaggressive AB/Gat and Congenic Highly Aggressive Mice

Prior H, Schwegler H, Marashi V, Sachser N

Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift)

Zusammenfassung

AB/Gat mice and congenic mice bred for high aggressiveness (CS/ag) were tested for exploratory behavior in novel situations and anxiety-related behavior, using an open-field test and the elevated plus-maze test. Subsequently, the size of hippocampal mossy fiber terminal fields was evaluated. Considerably higher exploratory activity was found in nonaggressive mice, whereas aggressive mice exhibited more anxiety-related behavior. Larger intra- and infrapyramidal mossy fiber terminal fields (IIP-MF) and a larger hilus were found in the highly aggressive strain. Within the nonaggressive AB/Gat strain, larger IIP-MF were correlated with higher exploratory behavior and lower anxiety in the plus-maze test. Within the aggressive strain, no individual correlations between hippocampal morphometry and behavior were found. The results corroborate the "ecotype hypothesis," which suggests that mice of subpopulations with highly aggressive males tend to display reduced exploratory behavior. The findings support the view that genetic factors involved in aggressive behavior also affect hippocampal connectivity. However, our results do not support the hypothesis that a higher level of aggressiveness is necessarily related to smaller IIP-MF. (C) 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Details zur Publikation

FachzeitschriftHippocampus
Jahrgang / Bandnr. / Volume14
Ausgabe / Heftnr. / Issue1
Seitenbereich135-140
StatusVeröffentlicht
Veröffentlichungsjahr2004 (31.12.2004)
Sprache, in der die Publikation verfasst istEnglisch
Stichwörteraggressiveness exploration anxiety mossy fibers AB/Gat congenic mice spatial reference memory inbred mouse strains elevated plus-maze genetic-analysis structural variation behavioral-responses working-memory open-field distributions environment

Autor*innen der Universität Münster

Sachser, Norbert

Projekte, aus denen die Publikation entstanden ist

Laufzeit: 12.02.2008 - 31.01.2012
Gefördert durch: DFG - Sachbeihilfe/Einzelförderung
Art des Projekts: Gefördertes Einzelprojekt