High-throughput sleep phenotyping produces robust and heritable traits in Diversity Outbred mice and their founder strains

Author:

Keenan Brendan T1,Galante Raymond J1,Lian Jie1,Simecek Petr23,Gatti Daniel M3,Zhang Lin1,Lim Diane C1,Svenson Karen L3,Churchill Gary A3,Pack Allan I1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

2. Central European Institute of Technology, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic

3. Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME

Abstract

AbstractStudy ObjectivesThis study describes high-throughput phenotyping strategies for sleep and circadian behavior in mice, including examinations of robustness, reliability, and heritability among Diversity Outbred (DO) mice and their eight founder strains.MethodsWe performed high-throughput sleep and circadian phenotyping in male mice from the DO population (n = 338) and their eight founder strains: A/J (n = 6), C57BL/6J (n = 14), 129S1/SvlmJ (n = 6), NOD/LtJ (n = 6), NZO/H1LtJ (n = 6), CAST/EiJ (n = 8), PWK/PhJ (n = 8), and WSB/EiJ (n = 6). Using infrared beam break systems, we defined sleep as at least 40 s of continuous inactivity and quantified sleep–wake amounts and bout characteristics. We developed assays to measure sleep latency in a new environment and during a modified Murine Multiple Sleep Latency Test, and estimated circadian period from wheel-running experiments. For each trait, broad-sense heritability (proportion of variability explained by all genetic factors) was derived in founder strains, while narrow-sense heritability (proportion of variability explained by additive genetic effects) was calculated in DO mice.ResultsPhenotypes were robust to different inactivity durations to define sleep. Differences across founder strains and moderate/high broad-sense heritability were observed for most traits. There was large phenotypic variability among DO mice, and phenotypes were reliable, although estimates of heritability were lower than in founder mice. This likely reflects important nonadditive genetic effects.ConclusionsA high-throughput phenotyping strategy in mice, based primarily on monitoring of activity patterns, provides reliable and heritable estimates of sleep and circadian traits. This approach is suitable for discovery analyses in DO mice, where genetic factors explain some proportion of phenotypic variation.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Clinical Neurology

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