1. Frequent exposure to varied home cage sizes alters pain sensitivity and some key inflammation-related biomarkers
- Author
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Wahab Imam Abdulmajeed, Kehinde Olumide Oyafemi, Kolade Samson Badmus, Abdulrazaq Bidemi Nafiu, Abdulbasit Amin, Oluwaseun A. Adeyanju, Aboyeji Lukuman Oyewole, Ateeqah Oreoluwa Yussuf, Olugbenga Samuel Michael, Gbowoloye Lanre Ogunjimi, Omolade Adeniyi-Raheem, Olugbenga Akinola, Midrar Folahanmi Abubakar, Solomon Sunday Ishola, Olayemi Joseph Olajide, Abdul-hameed Amedu, Abdul-Musawwir Alli-Oluwafuyi, Aishat Oluwakemi Ijiyode, Dolapo Latifah Lawal, F.A. Sulaimon, and Janet Omotola Omoleye
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Inflammation ,Male ,Pain Threshold ,Test group ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Physiology ,Pain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Housing, Animal ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Home cage ,Animals ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cage ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biomarkers ,Cage size - Abstract
Nature and size of rodent cages vary from one laboratory or country to another. Little is however known about the physiological implications of exposure to diverse cage sizes in animal-based experiments.Here, two groups of male Swiss mice (Control group - Cage stationed, and Test group - Cage migrated) were used for this study. The cage-migrated mice were exposed daily to various cage sizes used across laboratories in Nigeria while the cage-stationed mice exposed daily to different but the same cage size and shape. At the end of the 30 days exposure, top-rated paradigms were used to profile changes in physiological behaviours, and this was followed by evaluation of histological and biochemical metrics.The study showed a significant (p 0.05) decrease in blood glucose levels (at 60 and 120 min of oral glucose tolerance test) in the cage-migrated mice compared to cage-stationed mice. Strikingly, peripheral oxidative stress (plasma malondialdehyde) and pain sensitivity (formalin test, hot-and-cold plate test, and von Frey test) decreased significantly in cage-migrated mice compared to cage-stationed animals. Also, the pro-inflammation mediators (IL-6 and NF-κB) increased significantly in cage-migrated mice compared to cage-stationed mice. However, emotion-linked behaviours, neurotransmitters (serotonin, noradrenaline and GABA), brain and plasma electrolytes were not significantly difference in cage-migrated animals compared to cage-stationed mice.Taken together, these results suggest that varied size cage-to-cage exposure of experimental mice could affect targeted behavioural and biomolecular parameters of pain and inflammation, thus diminishing research reproducibility, precipitating false negative/positive results and leading to poor translational outcomes.
- Published
- 2020