Modeling Mouse Anxiety and Sensorimotor Integration: Neurobehavioral Phenotypes in the Suok Test

Elisabeth Dow(Connecticut College), Valerie Piet(Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans), Adam Stewart(Tulane University), Siddharth Gaikwad(Tulane University), Jonathan Cachat(Tulane University), Peter C. Hart(Tulane University), Nadine Wu(Tulane University), Evan J. Kyzar(Tulane University), Eli Utterback(Tulane University), Alan Newman(Tulane University), Molly Hook(Tulane University), Kathryn Rhymes(Tulane University), Dillon Carlos(Tulane University), Allan V. Kalueff(Tulane University)
Neuromethods
January 1, 2011
Cited by 2

Abstract

Animal behavioral tests are useful tools for modeling complex human brain disorders. The Suok test (ST) is a relatively new behavioral paradigm that simultaneously examines anxiety and neurological/vestibular phenotypes in rodents. The novelty and instability of the ST apparatus induces anxiety-related behavior in mice, whereas the elevation of the horizontal rod allows for the assessment of motor and neurological phenotypes. This chapter discusses the utility of the ST in detecting mouse anxiety, habituation, exploration, motorisensory deficits, and the interplay between these domains. With a growing number of laboratories using this model, a detailed protocol for the ST behavioral analysis (with a focus on video-tracking tools and novel applications) is also provided.


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