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Publication : Respiratory and sniffing behaviors throughout adulthood and aging in mice.

First Author  Wesson DW Year  2011
Journal  Behav Brain Res Volume  223
Issue  1 Pages  99-106
PubMed ID  21524667 Mgi Jnum  J:175738
Mgi Id  MGI:5287099 Doi  10.1016/j.bbr.2011.04.016
Citation  Wesson DW, et al. (2011) Respiratory and sniffing behaviors throughout adulthood and aging in mice. Behav Brain Res 223(1):99-106
abstractText  Orienting responses are physiological and active behavioral reactions evoked by novel stimulus perception and are critical for survival. We explored whether odor orienting responses are impacted throughout both adulthood and normal and pathological aging in mice. Novel odor investigation (including duration and bout numbers) and its subsequent habituation as assayed in the odor habituation task were preserved in adult C57BL/6J mice up to 12 mo of age with <6% variability between age groups in investigation time. Separately, using whole-body plethysmography we found that both spontaneous respiration and odor-evoked sniffing behaviors were strikingly preserved in wildtype (WT) mice up to 26 mo of age. In contrast, mice accumulating amyloid-beta protein in the brain by means of overexpressing mutations in the human amyloid precursor protein gene (APP) showed preserved spontaneous respiration up to 12 mo, but starting at 14 mo showed significant differences from WT. Similar to WTs, odor-evoked sniffing was not impacted in APP mice up to 26 mo. These results show that odor-orienting responses are minimally impacted throughout aging in mice, and suggest that the olfactomotor network is mostly spared of insults due to aging.
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