Growth and Behavior of Congenitally Anophthalmic Lee-Sung Pigs.

Comp Med

Institute of Veterinary Clinical Science, School of Veterinary Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.

Published: May 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Circadian rhythms are typically influenced by light-dark cycles, and congenitally anophthalmic miniature pigs serve as a unique model to study these rhythms without visual light exposure.
  • The study examined growth and behavior in Lee-Sung pigs with congenital anophthalmia (LSP-A) compared to normally developed pigs (LSP-N), finding no differences in growth but notable differences in activity patterns.
  • LSP-A pigs were more active during the day and night, exhibiting circadian rhythm abnormalities similar to blind humans, suggesting potential applications for understanding brain plasticity and hormone regulation without visual cues.

Article Abstract

Circadian rhythm is usually regulated by the environmental light-dark cycle. Congenitally anophthalmic miniature pigs provide a valuable model for the study of factors affecting circadian rhythms in the absence of visual exposure to the light-dark cycle. This study investigated the growth and daily behavior patterns of Lee-Sung pigs with congenital anophthalmia. Growth in 5 Lee-Sung pigs (LSP) with congenital anophthalmia (LSP-A) and 10 normally developed pigs (LSP-N) was assessed when they were 1 through 6 mo old. Behavioral studies using digital video recording were completed in 6 sexually mature LSP (3 LSP-A and 3 LSP-N). MRI showed that LSP-A lose their vision because of a lack of retinal input and optic chiasm development. LSP-N and LSP-A did not differ in body weight or size at 2, 4, and 6 mo of age. Behavior and activity pattern studies showed that both LSP-A and LSP-N were active mainly during daylight, but LSP-A spent significantly more time exploring their environment during the day (28%) and night (10%) than did LSP-N. This study revealed that growth performance was similar between LSP-A and normal pigs, but their behavior and activity patterns differed. LSP-A showed circadian rhythm abnormalities similar to those in blind humans. This study provides basic data on LSP-A as a model for studying compensatory cross-modal brain plasticity and hormone regulation in the absence of retinal input is deficient and for understanding the role of circadian rhythm regulation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6591681PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.30802/AALAS-CM-18-000095DOI Listing

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