AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study emphasizes the importance of assessing animal welfare and discomfort in research by focusing on various indicators, including body condition, weight, and behavior, specifically in mice with arthritis.
  • - Researchers analyzed nesting behavior in multiple mouse strains suffering from collagen antibody-induced arthritis (CAIA) and found a slight correlation between nesting scores and overall health metrics like body weight and grip strength.
  • - The findings suggest that monitoring nesting behavior could be an effective, non-invasive method to evaluate the well-being of mice in experimental arthritis studies, and it may support the idea of providing nesting material during severe disease stages.

Article Abstract

Objective animal health evaluation is essential to determine welfare and discomfort in preclinical in vivo research. Body condition scores, body weight, and grimace scales are commonly used to evaluate well-being in murine rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and osteoarthritis experiments. However, nest-building, a natural behavior in mice, has not yet been evaluated in wild type (WT) or genetically modified rodents suffering from collagen antibody-induced arthritis (CAIA). To address this, we analyzed nesting behavior in WT mice, calcitonin gene-related peptide alpha-deficient (αCGRP) mice, and calcitonin receptor-deficient (Calcr) mice suffering from experimental RA compared to healthy control (CTRL) groups of the same genotypes. CAIA was induced in 10-12-week-old male mice, and clinical parameters (body weight, grip strength, clinical arthritis score, ankle size) as well as nesting behavior were assessed over 10 or 48 days. A slight positive association between the nest score and body weight and grip strength was found for animals suffering from CAIA. For the clinical arthritis score and ankle size, no significant associations were observed. Mixed model analyses confirmed these associations. This study demonstrates that clinical effects of RA, such as loss of body weight and grip strength, might negatively affect nesting behavior in mice. Assessing nesting behavior in mice with arthritis could be an additional, non-invasive and thus valuable health parameter in future experiments to monitor welfare and discomfort in mice. During severe disease stages, pre-formed nest-building material may be provided to animals suffering from arthritis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10754866PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-49720-yDOI Listing

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