Abstract

Mice are nocturnal animals. Surprisingly, the majority of physiological/pharmacological studies are performed in the morning, i.e., in the non-active phase of their diurnal cycle. We have shown recently that female (not male) mice lacking the M4 muscarinic receptors (MR, M4KO) did not differ substantially in locomotor activity from their wild-type counterparts (C57Bl/6Tac) during the inactive period. Increased locomotion has been shown in the active phase of their diurnal cycle. We compared the effects of scopolamine, oxotremorine, and cocaine on locomotor response, hypothermia and spontaneous behavior in the open field arena in the morning (9:00 AM) and in the evening (9:00 PM) in WT and in C57Bl/6NTac mice lacking the M4 MR. Furthermore, we also studied morning vs. evening densities of muscarinic, GABAA, D1-like, D2-like, NMDA and kainate receptors using autoradiography in the motor, somatosensory and visual cortex and in the striatum, thalamus, hippocampus, pons, and medulla oblongata. At 9:00 AM, scopolamine induced an increase in motor activity in WT and in M4KO, yet no significant increase was observed at 9:00 PM. Oxotremorine induced hypothermic effects in both WT and M4KO. Hypothermic effects were more evident in WT than in M4KO. Hypothermia in both cases was more pronounced at 9:00 AM than at 9:00 PM. Cocaine increased motor activity when compared to saline. There was no difference in behavior in the open field between WT and M4KO when tested at 9:00 AM; however, at 9:00 PM, activity of M4KO was doubled in comparison to that of WT. Both WT and KO animals spent less time climbing in their active phase. Autoradiography revealed no significant morning vs. evening difference. Altogether, our results indicate the necessity of comparing morning vs. evening drug effects

Highlights

  • Mice are nocturnal animals (Roedel et al, 2006)

  • We have shown recently (Valuskova et al, 2018b) that female mice lacking the M4 muscarinic receptors (MR, M4KO) did not differ substantially in locomotor activity from their wild-type counterparts (C57Bl/6Tac) during the light period

  • There was significant interaction between genotype and time (F1,20 = 10.05, p = 0.005, both saline and scopolamine differed in AM vs. PM effects, p < 0.001, p = 0.03 for saline and scopolamine, respectively)

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Summary

Introduction

Mice are nocturnal animals (Roedel et al, 2006). the majority of physiological/pharmacological studies are performed during the morning. Experiments are conducted in their non-active phase of the diurnal cycle. The question is obvious: could the results of such physiological/pharmacological experiments be affected by this discrepancy?. We have shown recently (Valuskova et al, 2018b) that female mice lacking the M4 muscarinic receptors (MR, M4KO) did not differ substantially in locomotor activity from their wild-type counterparts (C57Bl/6Tac) during the light period. In the dark phase (active phase of the diurnal cycle in mice), the M4KO mice exhibited changes in various parameters; briefly, their activity was higher. These differences were sex related and were not observed in males

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