Vol 118, No 1 (Supplement) 2013
Original Article

Behavioral analysis of relaxin-3 deficient mice

Published 2014-01-11

Keywords

  • Relaxin-3,
  • knockout,
  • battery of behavioral tests,
  • elevated plus maze test,
  • high fat diet

How to Cite

Tanaka, M., Furube, E., Aoki, M., & Watanabe, Y. (2014). Behavioral analysis of relaxin-3 deficient mice. Italian Journal of Anatomy and Embryology, 118(1), 56–59. Retrieved from https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/ijae/article/view/3256

Abstract

Relaxin-3 is a neuropeptide belonging to the relaxin/insulin superfamily. Studies using rodents have revealed that relaxin-3 is predominantly expressed in neurons in the nucleus incertus of the pons, projecting axons to forebrain regions including the hypothalamus. There is evidence that relaxin-3 is involved in several functions, including food intake and stress responses. We generated relaxin-3 gene knockout (KO) mice and examined them using a battery of behavioral tests of sensory/motor functions and emotion-related behaviors. Relaxin-3 KO mice exhibited normal growth and appearance. There was no difference in bodyweight among genotypes in both normal and high fat diet feeding. In addition, there were no significant differences between wild-type and KO mice in social interaction, depression-like behavior, and short memory test. However, in the elevated plus maze test, KO mice exhibited a robust increase in the tendency to enter open arms, although they exhibited normal performance in a light/dark transition test and showed no difference from wild-type mice in the open field test. Taken together, these results indicate that relaxin-3 KO mice exhibit mild anxiolytic characteristics relative to wild-type mice, suggesting that this peptide is involved in anxiety-related behavior.