Quantitative effects of diet on fecal corticosterone metabolites in two strains of laboratory mice

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Quantitative effects of diet on fecal corticosterone metabolites in two strains of laboratory mice. / Kalliokoski, Otto; Jacobsen, Kirsten Rosenmaj; Teilmann, Anne Charlotte; Hau, Jann; Abelson, Klas.

In: In Vivo, Vol. 26, No. 2, 03.2012, p. 213-221.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kalliokoski, O, Jacobsen, KR, Teilmann, AC, Hau, J & Abelson, K 2012, 'Quantitative effects of diet on fecal corticosterone metabolites in two strains of laboratory mice', In Vivo, vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 213-221. <http://iv.iiarjournals.org/content/26/2/213.short>

APA

Kalliokoski, O., Jacobsen, K. R., Teilmann, A. C., Hau, J., & Abelson, K. (2012). Quantitative effects of diet on fecal corticosterone metabolites in two strains of laboratory mice. In Vivo, 26(2), 213-221. http://iv.iiarjournals.org/content/26/2/213.short

Vancouver

Kalliokoski O, Jacobsen KR, Teilmann AC, Hau J, Abelson K. Quantitative effects of diet on fecal corticosterone metabolites in two strains of laboratory mice. In Vivo. 2012 Mar;26(2):213-221.

Author

Kalliokoski, Otto ; Jacobsen, Kirsten Rosenmaj ; Teilmann, Anne Charlotte ; Hau, Jann ; Abelson, Klas. / Quantitative effects of diet on fecal corticosterone metabolites in two strains of laboratory mice. In: In Vivo. 2012 ; Vol. 26, No. 2. pp. 213-221.

Bibtex

@article{48222b3e768c4f50ae5b02078a3d49b9,
title = "Quantitative effects of diet on fecal corticosterone metabolites in two strains of laboratory mice",
abstract = "The analysis of glucocorticoids excreted in feces is becoming a widespread technique for determining animal wellbeing in a wide variety of settings. In the present study an extraction protocol and an ELISA assay for quantifying fecal corticosterone metabolites (FCM) in BALB/c and C57bl/6 mice were validated. Lower ratios of solvent (ethanol) to mass of fecal sample were found to be sufficient in extracting FCM compared to what has been reported previously. Feeding mice a high energy diet, high in fat content (60% of calories from fat), significantly lowered the FCM excretion, approximately halving the FCM output. This diet also reduced the fecal mass voided to approximately a third of that of the regular diet. The two reductions were not correlated. A difference in defecation pattern was seen between the two strains, with the BALB/c mice having a more pronounced diurnal rhythm compared to the C57bl/6 mice. Furthermore, throughout the experiment, the C57bl/6 mice excreted significantly higher levels of FCM compared to the BALB/c mice. The mice were also challenged with synthetic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and dexamethasone (DEX). The effect of the challenges could readily be detected, but had a considerably lesser impact on data than did the difference in diet. The study demonstrates some problematic consequences of expressing FCM excretion as a measure of fecal dry mass. The study also serves to emphasize the caution that must be exercised when interpreting FCM excretion in conjunction with an uncontrolled or varied diet, or perturbations of gastro-intestinal functioning.",
author = "Otto Kalliokoski and Jacobsen, {Kirsten Rosenmaj} and Teilmann, {Anne Charlotte} and Jann Hau and Klas Abelson",
year = "2012",
month = mar,
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "213--221",
journal = "In Vivo",
issn = "0258-851X",
publisher = "International Institute of Anticancer Research",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Quantitative effects of diet on fecal corticosterone metabolites in two strains of laboratory mice

AU - Kalliokoski, Otto

AU - Jacobsen, Kirsten Rosenmaj

AU - Teilmann, Anne Charlotte

AU - Hau, Jann

AU - Abelson, Klas

PY - 2012/3

Y1 - 2012/3

N2 - The analysis of glucocorticoids excreted in feces is becoming a widespread technique for determining animal wellbeing in a wide variety of settings. In the present study an extraction protocol and an ELISA assay for quantifying fecal corticosterone metabolites (FCM) in BALB/c and C57bl/6 mice were validated. Lower ratios of solvent (ethanol) to mass of fecal sample were found to be sufficient in extracting FCM compared to what has been reported previously. Feeding mice a high energy diet, high in fat content (60% of calories from fat), significantly lowered the FCM excretion, approximately halving the FCM output. This diet also reduced the fecal mass voided to approximately a third of that of the regular diet. The two reductions were not correlated. A difference in defecation pattern was seen between the two strains, with the BALB/c mice having a more pronounced diurnal rhythm compared to the C57bl/6 mice. Furthermore, throughout the experiment, the C57bl/6 mice excreted significantly higher levels of FCM compared to the BALB/c mice. The mice were also challenged with synthetic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and dexamethasone (DEX). The effect of the challenges could readily be detected, but had a considerably lesser impact on data than did the difference in diet. The study demonstrates some problematic consequences of expressing FCM excretion as a measure of fecal dry mass. The study also serves to emphasize the caution that must be exercised when interpreting FCM excretion in conjunction with an uncontrolled or varied diet, or perturbations of gastro-intestinal functioning.

AB - The analysis of glucocorticoids excreted in feces is becoming a widespread technique for determining animal wellbeing in a wide variety of settings. In the present study an extraction protocol and an ELISA assay for quantifying fecal corticosterone metabolites (FCM) in BALB/c and C57bl/6 mice were validated. Lower ratios of solvent (ethanol) to mass of fecal sample were found to be sufficient in extracting FCM compared to what has been reported previously. Feeding mice a high energy diet, high in fat content (60% of calories from fat), significantly lowered the FCM excretion, approximately halving the FCM output. This diet also reduced the fecal mass voided to approximately a third of that of the regular diet. The two reductions were not correlated. A difference in defecation pattern was seen between the two strains, with the BALB/c mice having a more pronounced diurnal rhythm compared to the C57bl/6 mice. Furthermore, throughout the experiment, the C57bl/6 mice excreted significantly higher levels of FCM compared to the BALB/c mice. The mice were also challenged with synthetic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and dexamethasone (DEX). The effect of the challenges could readily be detected, but had a considerably lesser impact on data than did the difference in diet. The study demonstrates some problematic consequences of expressing FCM excretion as a measure of fecal dry mass. The study also serves to emphasize the caution that must be exercised when interpreting FCM excretion in conjunction with an uncontrolled or varied diet, or perturbations of gastro-intestinal functioning.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 213

EP - 221

JO - In Vivo

JF - In Vivo

SN - 0258-851X

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 46284854