1. Genetic background influences the effect of thirdhand smoke exposure on anxiety and memory in Collaborative Cross mice
- Author
-
Peyton Jacob, Yankai Xia, Xu Yang, Bo Hang, Jian-Hua Mao, Suzyann F. Schick, Abel Po-Hao Huang, Hang Chang, Antoine M. Snijders, Pin Wang, and Li He
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Collaborative Cross Mice ,Male ,Scoring system ,Science ,Population ,Physiology ,Anxiety ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Third-hand smoke ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Memory ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Genetic variation ,Genetics ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Aetiology ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Phenotype ,Mental Health ,030104 developmental biology ,Risk factors ,Cohort ,Female ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,Passive avoidance ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Growing evidence indicates that thirdhand smoke (THS) exposure induces many adverse health effects. However, it is unclear how THS exposure affects behavior and how host genetic background modulates phenotypic changes. Here we used the Collaborative Cross (CC) mouse population-based model to assess behavioral alterations immediately after THS exposure from 4 to 9 weeks of age. We first measured anxiety-like behavior in six strains using light/dark box combined with a custom multivariate mouse tracking system. We developed an anxiety risk scoring system based on anxiety-related traits and then evaluated the THS impact on them. THS exposure significantly decreased anxiety risk in CC019 (P = 0.002) and CC051 (P = 0.009), but increased anxiety risk in CC036 (P
- Published
- 2021