"Us vs. Them" Pair Housing: Effects on Body Weight, Open Field Behavior, and Gut Microbiota in Rats Selectively Bred on a Taste Phenotype
•A taste phenotype is associated with detection evasion and escape in an open field•Chronic stress from housing with an other-line rat affects weight gain and behavior•Gut microbiota differed between lines and transferred between social partners•Whether gut microbiota mediate line differences and ho...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physiology & behavior 2020-09, Vol.223, p.112975-112975, Article 112975 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •A taste phenotype is associated with detection evasion and escape in an open field•Chronic stress from housing with an other-line rat affects weight gain and behavior•Gut microbiota differed between lines and transferred between social partners•Whether gut microbiota mediate line differences and housing effects remains unclear
Taste is increasingly recognized as being related to reward, risk, and social processes beyond the ingestive domain. Occidental High (HiS) and Low (LoS) Saccharin Consuming rats have been selectively bred for more than 25 years to study those relationships. The present study examined LoS and HiS rats’ sensitivity to a social partner's lineage. The role of gut microbiome transfer between lines was also explored as a possible mediating mechanism. Rats were pair-housed with a rat from either their own line (same-line condition) or the other line (other-line condition); weight gain, saccharin intake, acoustic startle, and open field behavior were measured. Results show for the first time that the lines express different behavioral strategies in a novel open field. In addition, weight gain and open field measures indicate that other-line housing was stressful. Saccharin intake, however, was unaffected by housing condition. A previous finding that the lines possess different gut microbiota was replicated. Although microbial transfer occurred between social partners, no clear evidence was obtained that housing-condition effects on weight gain or behavior were mediated by microbial transfer. Overall, these findings add to the characterization of non-gustatory correlates of a taste phenotype and suggest that rats differing strikingly on the taste phenotype and/or its correlates may be socially incompatible. |
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ISSN: | 0031-9384 1873-507X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.112975 |