Recently, the Tripodi lab at the LMB-MRC in Cambridge recently succeeded in
importing and successfully breeding a wild strain of mice, caught in the Arizona
desert, the Onychomys torridus, also known as the "grasshopper mouse".
More...Recently, the Tripodi lab at the LMB-MRC in Cambridge recently succeeded in
importing and successfully breeding a wild strain of mice, caught in the Arizona
desert, the Onychomys torridus, also known as the "grasshopper mouse". These
muridae, unlike mus musculus, show a very prominent and innate predatory instinct.
Northern Grasshopper Mice are highly predatory, and their skulls and teeth resemble
those of flesh-eating carnivores such as cats and dogs. Their forelimbs, equipped
with elongated fingers and claws, have developed great dexterity, so they are able
to manipulate captured prey. These Mice have a complex social system, using
howling vocalizations to broadcast information on sex, identity, body size, and
location. Grasshopper Mice prey primarily on grasshoppers, crickets, beetles, and
notably are resistant to scorpion venom. These muridae, unlike mus musculus, show
a very prominent and innate predatory instinct. Predatory behaviour is a magnificent
example of an instinctive behaviour that largely depends on the ability to direct
precise movements towards a target. Some animals display a highly developed
predatory instinct, cats are a fine example, others a poor one. In these species,
predatory behaviour is innate and likely genetically predetermined. Albeit capable of
generating target oriented motion, laboratory mice show poor predatory skills. As
the name suggests they chase and capture grasshoppers and they pursue a variety
of moving targets. They morphological and phylogenetic vicinity to the mus
musculus might allow us to investigate what changes in circuit organization and
neuronal properties underlie the evolution of predatory behaviour or the loss of it.
We believe that the Onychomys represents an exciting opportunity to study the
evolution of instinct to an unprecedented level of genetic and neural circuit detail.
We also believe that it might pave the way to a different approach to the study of
animal behaviour, where the selection of the appropriate animal is strictly dictated
by the behaviour that one intends to study. Recent advancements in viral circuit
tracing and manipulation that we pioneered combined with the improvement in
CRISPR genome-editing approach truly offers the opportunity to reach the same
degree of genetic understanding that was, until now, only possible in mice.
However, at the very foundation of such approach, lies the possibility to obtain
detailed genome information of the proposed new animal model.
This data is part of a pre-publication release. For information on the proper use of
pre-publication data shared by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute (including details
of any publication moratoria), please see http://www.sanger.ac.uk/datasharing/
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