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Context-dependent reshaping of defensive responses to predators in head-fixed and freely moving mice

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Item Type:Preprint
Title:Context-dependent reshaping of defensive responses to predators in head-fixed and freely moving mice
Creators Name:Ritter, Marti, Barreira, Lara Mariel Chirich, Sach, Lara, Hakus, Aileen, Öktem, Sanra Kumsal, Bergmann, Ronny, Voigt, Anne, Schmitz, Dietmar, Poirazi, Panayiota, Larkum, Matthew E. and Sachdev, Robert N.S.
Abstract:Behavioral responses to threat — such as fleeing, freezing, or fighting—can be innate, learned, and strongly shaped by context or competing goals. Here, we asked whether exposure to an ecologically relevant predator obligatorily elicits canonical defensive behaviors across behavioral contexts. We examined predator responses in mice across four experimental conditions: one novel head-fixed reward-driven foraging task and three established paradigms in freely moving animals. In the head-fixed condition, water-deprived mice were trained to walk on a treadmill controlling a virtual environment and water reward delivery and were subsequently exposed to a live rat positioned above the lick spout. Despite the presence of the predator, most mice (5 of 7) maintained foraging performance at baseline levels. However, individual mice exhibited significant, coordinated changes in running speed, pupil diameter, eye movements, and posture, indicating engagement with the threat. To assess how context influences predator responses, we exposed 36 naïve, freely moving mice to fear-inducing stimuli, including looming visual cues, rat odor, and a live rat. Even under these conditions, defensive behaviors were variable: only a subset of mice displayed avoidance or escape, and when presented with a freely moving rat, approximately half of the mice avoided the predator. Together, these findings show that predator threat does not elicit a uniform or obligatory defensive repertoire in mice. Instead, defensive responses are expressed flexibly, and are shaped by environmental constraints, task demands, and individual variability. These results challenge the assumption that innate fear behaviors are automatically triggered by predator encounters.
Keywords:Innate Fear, Predator, Defensive Behaviors, Animals, Mice, Rats
Source:bioRxiv
Publisher:Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Article Number:2025.06.09.658679v3
Date:16 March 2026
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.06.09.658679
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