Individually ventilated cages impose cold stress on laboratory mice: a source of systemic experimental variability.
J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci
; 52(6): 738-44, 2013 Nov.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-24351762
ABSTRACT
Individual ventilated cages (IVC) are increasing in popularity. Although mice avoid IVC in preference testing, they show no aversion when provided additional nesting material or the cage is not ventilated. Given the high ventilation rate in IVC, we developed 3 hypotheses that mice housed in IVC experience more cold stress than do mice housed in static cages; that IVC-induced cold stress affects the results of experiments using mice; and that, when provided shelters, mice behaviorally thermoregulate and thereby rescue the cold-stress effects of IVC. To test these hypotheses, we housed mice in IVC, IVC with shelters, and static cages maintained at 20 to 21 °C. We quantified the cold stress of each housing system on mice by assessing nonshivering thermogenesis and brown adipose vacuolation. To test housing effects in a common, murine model of human disease, we implanted mice with subcutaneous epidermoid carcinoma cells and quantified tumor growth, tumor metabolism, and adrenal weight. Mice housed in IVC had histologic signs of cold stress and significantly higher nonshivering thermogenesis, smaller subcutaneous tumors, lower tumor metabolism, and larger adrenal weights than did mice in static cages. Shelters rescued IVC-induced nonshivering thermogenesis, adrenal enlargement, and phenotype-dependent cold-mediated histologic changes in brown adipose tissue and tumor size. IVC impose chronic cold stress on mice, alter experimental results, and are a source of systemic confounders throughout rodent-dependent research. Allowing mice to exhibit behavioral thermoregulation through seeking shelter markedly rescues the experiment-altering effects of housing-imposed cold stress, improves physiologic uniformity, and increases experimental reproducibility across housing systems.
Texto completo:
1
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Abrigo para Animais
/
Camundongos
Limite:
Animals
Idioma:
En
Revista:
J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci
Assunto da revista:
MEDICINA VETERINARIA
/
TECNICAS E PROCEDIMENTOS DE LABORATORIO
Ano de publicação:
2013
Tipo de documento:
Article
País de afiliação:
Estados Unidos