Study of mouse behavior in different gravity environments

Abstract Many experiments have analyzed the effect of the space environment on various organisms. However, except for the group-rearing of mice in space, there has been little information on the behavior of organisms in response to gravity changes. In this study, we developed a simple Active Inactiv...

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Main Authors: Michihiko Shimomura, Akane Yumoto, Naoko Ota-Murakami, Takashi Kudo, Masaki Shirakawa, Satoru Takahashi, Hironobu Morita, Dai Shiba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-01-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-82013-w
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spelling doaj-13c7ded9121a4732bb735721e51abf092021-01-31T16:19:49ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-01-011111910.1038/s41598-021-82013-wStudy of mouse behavior in different gravity environmentsMichihiko Shimomura0Akane Yumoto1Naoko Ota-Murakami2Takashi Kudo3Masaki Shirakawa4Satoru Takahashi5Hironobu Morita6Dai Shiba7Mouse Epigenetics Project, ISS/Kibo Experiment, Japan Aerospace Exploration AgencyMouse Epigenetics Project, ISS/Kibo Experiment, Japan Aerospace Exploration AgencyTsukuba Division, Advanced Engineering Services Co. Ltd.Mouse Epigenetics Project, ISS/Kibo Experiment, Japan Aerospace Exploration AgencyMouse Epigenetics Project, ISS/Kibo Experiment, Japan Aerospace Exploration AgencyMouse Epigenetics Project, ISS/Kibo Experiment, Japan Aerospace Exploration AgencyMouse Epigenetics Project, ISS/Kibo Experiment, Japan Aerospace Exploration AgencyMouse Epigenetics Project, ISS/Kibo Experiment, Japan Aerospace Exploration AgencyAbstract Many experiments have analyzed the effect of the space environment on various organisms. However, except for the group-rearing of mice in space, there has been little information on the behavior of organisms in response to gravity changes. In this study, we developed a simple Active Inactive Separation (AIS) method to extract activity and inactivity in videos obtained from the habitat cage unit of a space experiment. This method yields an activity ratio as a ratio of ‘activity’ within the whole. Adaptation to different gravitational conditions from 1g to hypergravity (HG) and from microgravity (MG) to artificial 1g (AG) was analyzed based on the amount of activity to calculate the activity ratio and the active interval. The result for the activity ratios for the ground control experiment using AIS were close to previous studies, so the effectiveness of this method was indicated. In the case of changes in gravity from 1g to HG, the ratio was low at the start of centrifugation, recovered sharply in the first week, and entered a stable period in another week. The trend in the AG and HG was the same; adapting to different gravity environments takes time.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-82013-w
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michihiko Shimomura
Akane Yumoto
Naoko Ota-Murakami
Takashi Kudo
Masaki Shirakawa
Satoru Takahashi
Hironobu Morita
Dai Shiba
spellingShingle Michihiko Shimomura
Akane Yumoto
Naoko Ota-Murakami
Takashi Kudo
Masaki Shirakawa
Satoru Takahashi
Hironobu Morita
Dai Shiba
Study of mouse behavior in different gravity environments
Scientific Reports
author_facet Michihiko Shimomura
Akane Yumoto
Naoko Ota-Murakami
Takashi Kudo
Masaki Shirakawa
Satoru Takahashi
Hironobu Morita
Dai Shiba
author_sort Michihiko Shimomura
title Study of mouse behavior in different gravity environments
title_short Study of mouse behavior in different gravity environments
title_full Study of mouse behavior in different gravity environments
title_fullStr Study of mouse behavior in different gravity environments
title_full_unstemmed Study of mouse behavior in different gravity environments
title_sort study of mouse behavior in different gravity environments
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Many experiments have analyzed the effect of the space environment on various organisms. However, except for the group-rearing of mice in space, there has been little information on the behavior of organisms in response to gravity changes. In this study, we developed a simple Active Inactive Separation (AIS) method to extract activity and inactivity in videos obtained from the habitat cage unit of a space experiment. This method yields an activity ratio as a ratio of ‘activity’ within the whole. Adaptation to different gravitational conditions from 1g to hypergravity (HG) and from microgravity (MG) to artificial 1g (AG) was analyzed based on the amount of activity to calculate the activity ratio and the active interval. The result for the activity ratios for the ground control experiment using AIS were close to previous studies, so the effectiveness of this method was indicated. In the case of changes in gravity from 1g to HG, the ratio was low at the start of centrifugation, recovered sharply in the first week, and entered a stable period in another week. The trend in the AG and HG was the same; adapting to different gravity environments takes time.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-82013-w
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