Male Mice Have no Sugar-preference Behavior

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Abstract

Sugar-preference behavior is considered to be universally innate among humans and animals. Current research on the detection and mechanisms of sugar-preference behavior largely adopts the “two-bottle choice assay”, and most experiments use male mice as the model, which has serious methodological flaws, leading to questionable conclusions. As expected, through adopting our improved experimental method, we discovered distinct sugar preferences between male and female mice: females possess an innate preference, while males do not. However, the innate sugar preference in female mice can be lost due to their long-term normal diet. Even after “training” with high-sugar food for a long time, the results still show differences between males and females. Female mice retain a significant preference for sugar, while male mice are not influenced by the training of high-sugar food and still do not evolve a sugar preference. From this, we conclude that gender determines the emergence and development of sugar preference in mice. Our results can provide researchers with a new understanding of sugar preference, which will help them fill in or even correct the gaps in the original experimental design methods to obtain more reliable conclusions.

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