1 / 36

Rodents: Mice

Rodents: Mice. Dr. N. Matthew Ellinwood, D.V.M., Ph.D. Spring 2012. Iowa State University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Taxonomy. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Rodentia Superfamily: Muroidea Family: Muridae Subfamily: Murinae Genus: Mus

eljah
Télécharger la présentation

Rodents: Mice

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rodents:Mice Dr. N. Matthew Ellinwood, D.V.M., Ph.D. Spring 2012 Iowa State University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences

  2. Taxonomy Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Rodentia Superfamily: Muroidea Family: Muridae Subfamily: Murinae Genus: Mus Species: musculus (house mouse)

  3. Non-domestic “House Mouse” • Mus musculus domesticus • House mouse • A domesticated opportunist • Other mice may live in houses • Mice coming in from woods/fields • North American white-footed mice

  4. Mice in Popular/Children’s Literature

  5. Ancient Origins and Modern Retellings • Aesop’s Fables • The Lion and the Mouse • The Mouse, The Frog, and the Hawk • The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse • Beatrix Potter

  6. The Antiquity of Cat and Mouse

  7. Origins • South Asia/Northern India • Spread to Mediterranean basin by 10,000 YBP • Europe by 3,000 YBP • Kept as pets in China (3,000 YBP) • Now found world wide (exclusive of Antarctica?) • Mice in human migrations • Danish incursions to Madeira? • Viking incursions previously unknown • All mice in Madeira have a single mitochondrial linage related to Scandinavia/Northern Germany

  8. Modern Domestic Mice • Chinese lexicon discussing “spotted mice” • 1100 BCE • Dancing mice (later descriptions of waltzing) • Confucius, 500 BCE • Japan • Literature on various lines and breeding practices • Japanese lines introduced to Europe early 1600s • National Mouse Club, Britain, 1895

  9. Natural History • Life span: 1.5 years (extreme cases to 2+ yr) • Sexual maturity: 50-60 days • Estrous; 4-5 days • Weaning; 3-4 weeks • Pups; 4-12 per litter • Will tend to territoriality • Manage as littermate/pairings • Not ideally kept in groups

  10. Reproduction and Growth • Females, breed at 12 weeks • Gestation – 21 days • Cannibalism not uncommon • Environmental changes and / or stresses • Dams can be bred back at ~3 days • Atricial young: Hair at 2-4 days, ears open 3-5 days, eyes open at 14 days • Weaning at 3 weeks • Remove males at 4 weeks

  11. Territoriality and Pheromones and Reproduction • Vomeronasal organ (a distinct chemoreceptor organ located in the nasal cavity; different neuronal connections) • Whitten effect • W.K. Witten: male mouse pheromones will synchronize the estrous cycle of group housed females • Bruce effect • Exposure of a bred or pregnant female to a new male will cause pregnancy failure • Vanderbergh effect • Exposure to male urine pheromones will induce earlier first estrus in prepubertal females

  12. Housing • Classic shoe box housing • Rodent chow • Slotted cage top feeder • Drip bottle water • Draining/drowning • Bedding • 30-70% Humidity • 65-85 oF

  13. Feeding • Rodent Chow • Chewing • Tooth health • Enrichment • Supplement sparingly • Grains, seeds, vegetables • Coprophagic

  14. Behavior • Primarily nocturnal • Little to no color vision • Acute hearing up to ultrasound range • Vocal communication in human hearing (longer distance) and ultrasound range (shorter distance)

  15. Reproduction • Male courting and mounting behavior coincidental with ultrasound calling • Can be induced by female urine • Breeding at night • Vaginal plug (gelatinous plug resulting from seminal fluids) • Gestation: 21 days • Weaning at 3-8 weeks

  16. Housing • Trio Breeding • Male X 2 females per cage • Nesting material • Females will often assist in raising young • Housing males • Co-housing possible if brothers • Difficult to remove and reintroduce • Male vs females as pet • Males more exploratory • Female urine lacks strong smell

  17. Fancy Variants • Rat and Mouse Club of America • http://www.rmca.org/ • American Fancy Rat and Mouse Association • http://www.afrma.org/

  18. Modern Domestic Mice • Mix of various types: • Mus musculus musculus (eastern Europe) • Mus musculus domesticus (western Europe), Mus musculus castaneus (Southeast Asia) • Mus musculus molossinus (Japan) • Early important model of genetics • First mammalian demonstration of Mendelian genetics • Lucien Cuenot, 1902 • Early researchers • William Castle and student, C.C. Little • Little worked with and used stocks from A Lathrop

  19. Fancy to Research • Miss Abbie E.C. Lathrop • Illinois native • Producer pet trade, Granby, Mass. • Japanese waltzing mice • Began supplying research trade • Started developing inbred strains in 1910 • Same time as Little • Published on mouse tumors with Leo Loeb of U. of Penn • Died in 1918

  20. Research History • C line descend from Lathrop stock • Females 57 and 58 mated to male 52 • Developed as • C57BL • C57BR • Etc • Clarence Cook Little and the Jackson Laboratory

  21. Jackson Laboratory

  22. Jackson Laboratory • Clarence Cook Little • Cold Spring Harbor • University of Maine (Agricultural Experiment Station) • Collection moved to Jackson Laboratory • Housed mammalian genetic research and cancer research • Founded by Prexy and funded by wealthy Detroit industrialists

  23. Reproduction and Genetic Malleability • Mice/rodents • Transgenic and knockout technology • Short generation time • Tolerated inbreeding

  24. Mouse Strains • Now over three thousand strains of mice • Outbred stocks • Closed stock • Min inbreeding (1% per generation) • Random matings of 25 pairs • Ex: NIH Swiss mice • Heterogenous stocks

  25. Inbred Lines • 20 successive brother sister matings

  26. Congenic • Identical to a parental strain • Exception will be at one locus • B6.129S6-Naglutm1Efn/J • Versus • C57BL/6J

  27. Manipulated Genome

  28. Transgenics

  29. Transgenic: TechniquesApplications

  30. Homologous Recombination:(AKA Knockouts)

  31. Knockout Techniques

  32. Knockout Techniques

  33. Knockout Application • ALS • SOD1 mouse

  34. Knockins

  35. Conditional Knockouts • Cre Recombinase expressing mice • Express ubiquitously • Express at developmental stages • Express in specific tissues/cells • Expression that is inducible • Enzyme that cuts out a specific DNA sequence • Lox P sites • Floxed DNA sites of gene of interest • Crosses lead to gene/function elimination • Chromosomal excision

More Related