MOUSEVILLAGE | The Mouse Village: a fully automated behavioral system for continuous social and cognitive testing

Summary
Drug discovery in mental health is undergoing a crisis. Characterizing a new generation of biomarkers for the different disorders seems the promising path towards developing new treatments. Biomarkers, including behavioral biomarkers, are quantitative observables that are altered and can be used for diagnosis, prognosis or treatment response monitoring. Importantly for preclinical research, these biomarkers should be translational and work across species, but experiments in rodents are largely based on paradigms that are disparate from those used in humans. Training rodents in more human-like tasks has a strong translational potential, but it has important shortcomings: it requires developing finely-controlled tasks involving long training periods, consuming lots of animals and ultimately inducing very elevated personnel costs. To confront this experimental bottleneck , neuroscience and pharmaceutical laboratories are trying to automatize their methods, but still most systems rely on human intervention, require animal manipulation and impose a high maintenance toll.

Leveraging our experience building behavioral systems during our ERC-CoG-2015, we will design, build and distribute the Mouse Village (MV), a new fully-automated open platform in which mice self-trained 24/7 in different cognitive tasks while displaying complex social interactions without human intervention. The MV consists in a system of cages connected to an operant touchscreen chamber that can implement multiple cognitive tasks. We will build on a previously developed pilot MV by introducing a more modular and flexible design and validate the system using several standard social and cognitive tests. The MV will be shared to the community under and Open Software and Hardware licenses. By eliminating the experimental bottleneck imposed by behavioral experiments, the MV has the potential to accelerate the search for new biomarkers of brain disorders and have a substantial impact on mental health.
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Web resources: https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101101098
Start date: 01-03-2023
End date: 31-08-2024
Total budget - Public funding: - 150 000,00 Euro
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Original description

Drug discovery in mental health is undergoing a crisis. Characterizing a new generation of biomarkers for the different disorders seems the promising path towards developing new treatments. Biomarkers, including behavioral biomarkers, are quantitative observables that are altered and can be used for diagnosis, prognosis or treatment response monitoring. Importantly for preclinical research, these biomarkers should be translational and work across species, but experiments in rodents are largely based on paradigms that are disparate from those used in humans. Training rodents in more human-like tasks has a strong translational potential, but it has important shortcomings: it requires developing finely-controlled tasks involving long training periods, consuming lots of animals and ultimately inducing very elevated personnel costs. To confront this experimental bottleneck , neuroscience and pharmaceutical laboratories are trying to automatize their methods, but still most systems rely on human intervention, require animal manipulation and impose a high maintenance toll.

Leveraging our experience building behavioral systems during our ERC-CoG-2015, we will design, build and distribute the Mouse Village (MV), a new fully-automated open platform in which mice self-trained 24/7 in different cognitive tasks while displaying complex social interactions without human intervention. The MV consists in a system of cages connected to an operant touchscreen chamber that can implement multiple cognitive tasks. We will build on a previously developed pilot MV by introducing a more modular and flexible design and validate the system using several standard social and cognitive tests. The MV will be shared to the community under and Open Software and Hardware licenses. By eliminating the experimental bottleneck imposed by behavioral experiments, the MV has the potential to accelerate the search for new biomarkers of brain disorders and have a substantial impact on mental health.

Status

SIGNED

Call topic

ERC-2022-POC2

Update Date

09-02-2023
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