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Publication : The power of automated high-resolution behavior analysis revealed by its application to mouse models of Huntington's and prion diseases.

First Author  Steele AD Year  2007
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  104
Issue  6 Pages  1983-8
PubMed ID  17261803 Mgi Jnum  J:117096
Mgi Id  MGI:3695593 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0610779104
Citation  Steele AD, et al. (2007) The power of automated high-resolution behavior analysis revealed by its application to mouse models of Huntington's and prion diseases. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104(6):1983-1988
abstractText  Automated analysis of mouse behavior will be vital for elucidating the genetic determinants of behavior, for comprehensive analysis of human disease models, and for assessing the efficacy of various therapeutic strategies and their unexpected side effects. We describe a video-based behavior-recognition technology to analyze home-cage behaviors and demonstrate its power by discovering previously unrecognized features of two already extensively characterized mouse models of neurodegenerative disease. The severe motor abnormalities in Huntington's disease mice manifested in our analysis by decreased hanging, jumping, stretching, and rearing. Surprisingly, behaviors such as resting and grooming were also affected. Unexpectedly, mice with infectious prion disease showed profound increases in activity at disease onset: rearing increased 2.5-fold, walking 10-fold and jumping 30-fold. Strikingly, distinct behaviors were altered specifically during day or night hours. We devised a systems approach for multiple-parameter phenotypic characterization and applied it to defining disease onset robustly and at early time points.
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