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Reliability, robustness, and reproducibility in mouse behavioral phenotyping: a cross-laboratory study
Author(s) -
Silvia Mandillo,
Valter Tucci,
Sabine M. Hölter,
Hamid Méziane,
Mumna Al Banchaabouchi,
Magdalena Kallnik,
Heena V. Lad,
Patrick M. Nolan,
AbdelMouttalib Ouagazzal,
Emma L. Coghill,
Karin Gale,
Elisabetta Golini,
Sylvie Jacquot,
Wojciech Krężel,
Andy Parker,
Fabrice Riet,
Ilka Schneider,
Daniela Marazziti,
Johan Auwerx,
Steve D. M. Brown,
Pierre Chambon,
Nadia Rosenthal,
Glauco P. TocchiniValentini,
Wolfgang Wurst
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
physiological genomics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.078
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1531-2267
pISSN - 1094-8341
DOI - 10.1152/physiolgenomics.90207.2008
Subject(s) - robustness (evolution) , prepulse inhibition , computer science , startle response , reproducibility , reliability engineering , biology , neuroscience , statistics , engineering , genetics , mathematics , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , gene , programming language
Establishing standard operating procedures (SOPs) as tools for the analysis of behavioral phenotypes is fundamental to mouse functional genomics. It is essential that the tests designed provide reliable measures of the process under investigation but most importantly that these are reproducible across both time and laboratories. For this reason, we devised and tested a set of SOPs to investigate mouse behavior. Five research centers were involved across France, Germany, Italy, and the UK in this study, as part of the EUMORPHIA program. All the procedures underwent a cross-validation experimental study to investigate the robustness of the designed protocols. Four inbred reference strains (C57BL/6J, C3HeB/FeJ, BALB/cByJ, 129S2/SvPas), reflecting their use as common background strains in mutagenesis programs, were analyzed to validate these tests. We demonstrate that the operating procedures employed, which includes open field, SHIRPA, grip-strength, rotarod, Y-maze, prepulse inhibition of acoustic startle response, and tail flick tests, generated reproducible results between laboratories for a number of the test output parameters. However, we also identified several uncontrolled variables that constitute confounding factors in behavioral phenotyping. The EUMORPHIA SOPs described here are an important start-point for the ongoing development of increasingly robust phenotyping platforms and their application in large-scale, multicentre mouse phenotyping programs.

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