Anxiety in genetically heterogeneous rats: Towards the identification of quantitative genes for behavioural traits

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Resumen
The use of genetically heterogeneous (outbred) rodents is a unique resource for the identification and fine mapping of genetic loci (QTL) influencing biological and behavioural quantitative phenotypes, allowing the identification of quantitative genes. We present the first study of this kind carried out with genetically heterogeneous rats (N/Nih-HS; derivated from an eight-way cross of inbred strains), whose behaviour is assessed in tests evoking unlearned (Black/white box, Elevated "zero" maze) or learned (context conditioned freezing, two-way active avoidance acquisition in the shuttlebox) anxious/fearful responses. The behavioural profile of N/Nih-HS rats is more similar to that of RLA-I (anxious) rats rather than to RHA-I (low anxious) rats. Significant correlations are found among unconditioned anxiety variables and two-way active avoidance acquisition in the shuttlebox; these are partially confirmed by multiple regression analysis. "High avoider" N/Nih-HS rats show lower unlearned anxiety levels than "low avoiders". Results of this behavioural assessment of the N/Nih-HS rats are discussed in terms of their potential usefulness for present and future neurobehavioural and genetic studies of fearfulness and anxiety. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved) (Source: journal abstract)
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Revista académica
Ansiedad y Estrés
Año de publicación
2009
Volumen
15
Incidencia
1
Número de páginas
67-84
Fecha de publicación
01/2009
Tipo de artículo
Journal Article
Editorial
Numero ISSN
1134-7937
Número ISBN
2174-0437
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