Elie Julie Estelle, Soula Hédi Antoine, Trouvé Colette, Mathevon Nicolas, Vignal Clémentine
Université de Lyon/Saint-Étienne, Équipe de Neuro-Éthologie Sensorielle, ENES/Neuro-PSI, CNRS UMR 9197, 23, rue Michelon, 42023 Saint-Étienne, France.
Université de Lyon, INSERM U1060, INSA de Lyon, bâtiment Louis-Pasteur, 20, avenue Albert-Einstein, 69621 Villeurbanne cedex, France; INRIA EPI BEAGLE, bâtiment CEI-1, 66, boulevard Niels-Bohr, CS 52132, 69603 Villeurbanne, France.
C R Biol. 2015 Dec;338(12):825-37. doi: 10.1016/j.crvi.2015.09.004. Epub 2015 Nov 17.
Individual cages represent a widely used housing condition in laboratories. This isolation represents an impoverished physical and social environment in gregarious animals. It prevents animals from socializing, even when auditory and visual contact is maintained. Zebra finches are colonial songbirds that are widely used as laboratory animals for the study of vocal communication from brain to behavior. In this study, we investigated the effect of single housing on the vocal behavior and the brain activity of male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata): male birds housed in individual cages were compared to freely interacting male birds housed as a social group in a communal cage. We focused on the activity of septo-hypothalamic regions of the "social behavior network" (SBN), a set of limbic regions involved in several social behaviors in vertebrates. The activity of four structures of the SBN (BSTm, medial bed nucleus of the stria terminalis; POM, medial preoptic area; lateral septum; ventromedial hypothalamus) and one associated region (paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus) was assessed using immunoreactive nuclei density of the immediate early gene Zenk (egr-1). We further assessed the identity of active cell populations by labeling vasotocin (VT). Brain activity was related to behavioral activities of birds like physical and vocal interactions. We showed that individual housing modifies vocal exchanges between birds compared to communal housing. This is of particular importance in the zebra finch, a model species for the study of vocal communication. In addition, a protocol that daily removes one or two birds from the group affects differently male zebra finches depending of their housing conditions: while communally-housed males changed their vocal output, brains of individually housed males show increased Zenk labeling in non-VT cells of the BSTm and enhanced correlation of Zenk-revealed activity between the studied structures. These results show that housing conditions must gain some attention in behavioral neuroscience protocols.
单个笼子是实验室中广泛使用的一种饲养条件。这种隔离对群居动物而言意味着贫乏的物理和社会环境。它阻止动物进行社交,即便保持了听觉和视觉接触。斑胸草雀是群居性鸣禽,被广泛用作实验室动物来研究从大脑到行为的发声交流。在本研究中,我们调查了单笼饲养对雄性斑胸草雀(Taeniopygia guttata)发声行为和大脑活动的影响:将单独饲养在个体笼中的雄鸟与在公共笼中作为一个社会群体自由互动的雄鸟进行比较。我们聚焦于“社会行为网络”(SBN)中隔下丘脑区域的活动,这是一组参与脊椎动物多种社会行为的边缘区域。使用即刻早期基因Zenk(egr - 1)的免疫反应性核密度评估SBN的四个结构(终纹床核内侧部,BSTm;视前内侧区,POM;外侧隔;下丘脑腹内侧核)以及一个相关区域(下丘脑室旁核)的活动。我们通过标记血管紧张素(VT)进一步评估活跃细胞群的特征。大脑活动与鸟类的行为活动相关,如身体和发声互动。我们发现,与群居饲养相比,单笼饲养改变了鸟类之间的发声交流。这在斑胸草雀这一用于研究发声交流的模式物种中尤为重要。此外,一种每天从群体中移出一两只鸟的方案对雄性斑胸草雀的影响因其饲养条件而异:群居雄性改变了它们的发声输出,而单独饲养雄性的大脑在BSTm的非VT细胞中显示出Zenk标记增加,并且所研究结构之间Zenk揭示的活动相关性增强。这些结果表明,饲养条件在行为神经科学实验方案中必须得到一定关注。