| Literature DB >> 22919414 |
Ming Wai Hung1, Zai Jun Zhang, Shang Li, Benson Lei, Shuai Yuan, Guo Zhen Cui, Pui Man Hoi, Kelvin Chan, Simon Ming Yuen Lee.
Abstract
The zebrafish (Danio rerio) has recently become a common model in the fields of genetics, environmental science, toxicology, and especially drug screening. Zebrafish has emerged as a biomedically relevant model for in vivo high content drug screening and the simultaneous determination of multiple efficacy parameters, including behaviour, selectivity, and toxicity in the content of the whole organism. A zebrafish behavioural assay has been demonstrated as a novel, rapid, and high-throughput approach to the discovery of neuroactive, psychoactive, and memory-modulating compounds. Recent studies found a functional similarity of drug metabolism systems in zebrafish and mammals, providing a clue with why some compounds are active in zebrafish in vivo but not in vitro, as well as providing grounds for the rationales supporting the use of a zebrafish screen to identify prodrugs. Here, we discuss the advantages of the zebrafish model for evaluating drug metabolism and the mode of pharmacological action with the emerging omics approaches. Why this model is suitable for identifying lead compounds from natural products for therapy of disorders with multifactorial etiopathogenesis and imbalance of angiogenesis, such as Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, cardiotoxicity, cerebral hemorrhage, dyslipidemia, and hyperlipidemia, is addressed.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22919414 PMCID: PMC3420231 DOI: 10.1155/2012/605303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Discrepancies and similarities of the effect of drugs in human and zebrafish.
| Area of evaluation in zebrafish | Test compounds | Proportion of drugs with expected effects (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibition of hERG or QTc prolongation | Study 1: Amiodarone, bepridil, cisapride, haloperidol, pimozide, procainamide, D,L-sotalol, terfenadine, thioridazine | All compounds, except for procainamide | [ |
| Study 2: Negative controls: amoxicillin, aspirin | 7 out of 9 compounds, including negative controls | [ | |
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| Visual safety or optomotor response | Study 1: 27 compounds, including 19 with positive and 8 with negative effects on inhibition of optomotor response | About 70% in overall showed the predicted drug effects. | [ |
| Study 2: Negative control: aspirin | 7 out of 9 compounds including negative control | [ | |
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| Seizure liability | 25 drugs including 17 positive and 8 negative controls | 72% in overall | [ |
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| Gut contraction | Negative controls: aspirin and moxifloxacin | 5 out of 10 compounds including negative controls | [ |
Figure 1The metabolism of icaritin and calycosin in zebrafish embryos and larvae. The proposed routes of how icaritin and calycosin are metabolized in zebrafish embryos and larvae are summarized and some drug metabolism enzymes are identified by omics approach. The process and the corresponding gene are shown in each colored box. Glc: glycosylated group; Glu: glucuronidated group; Xyl: xylated group; SO3: sulfonated group; Xylt1: Xylosyltransferase 1; Ugt1a1, Ugt1ab: UDP-glucuronosyltransferase.
Figure 2A diagram showing the processing of zebrafish embryos for isolating endothelial cells followed by staining with DRAQ5. Tg(fli-1:EGFP) zebrafish embryos are firstly trypsinized into a cell suspension, stained with DRAQ5, and separated into GFP expressing endothelial cells and others.
Figure 3Cell-cycle analysis of zebrafish embryos after treatment with different concentration of an antiangiogenesis compound named trans-3,5,4′-trimethoxystilbene (TMS). Tg(fli-1:EGFP) zebrafish embryos treated with TMS for 20 h were then trypsinized and DRAQ5-stained for cell-cycle studies by flow cytometry. (a) Wildtype embryos did not show GFP-expressing-cells. (b) Tg(fli-1:EGFP) showed GFP expressing and non-GFP expressing cells. (c) 10 μM TMS and (d) 30 μM TMS exerted G2/M cell-cycle arrest preferentially in endothelial cells.
Figure 4The examples of zebrafish model for high content drug screening. Image-based bioassays reflecting the physiological changes in either wildtype or transgenic zebrafish enable the assessment of multiple pharmacological activities of a chemical compound.
Potential marker genes for PD.
| Gene | Function | Assessment method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) | Catalytic conversion of the amino acid L-tyrosine to dihydroxyphenylalanine | Immunostaining, locomotion behaviour test | [ |
| Dopamine transporter (DAT) | Membrane-spanning protein for pumping neurotransmitter DA back into cytosol from the synaptic region | Whole mount | [ |
| Vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) | Integral membrane protein for transporting neurotransmitter carrying monoamine structure, for example, dopamine and norepinephrine from cellular cytosol into synaptic vesicles | Visualization in VMAT2: GFP transgenic fish | [ |
| MAO-B | Catalytic oxidation of monoamines | Monoamine oxidase enzyme histochemistry | [ |
| PARKIN (PARK2) | Gene knockdown leads to complex I deficiency and dopaminergic neuronal cell loss | WISH, whole-mount antibody immunofluorescence, behaviour analysis | [ |
| LRRK2 | Genetic mutant caused loss of DA neuron and locomotive defect | WISH, swimming behaviour | [ |
Figure 5MPTP induces DA neuron loss in zebrafish. (a) Representative picture of anti-TH whole mount immunostaining. TH+ neurons in diencephalic region were indicated by bracket, dorsal view. L-dep, L-deprenyl (selegiline), a selective MAO-B inhibitor, was used as positive control. (b) Counting of TH+ neuron. (c) Relative fold change of th gene expression as compared to control, MPTP downregulated th gene expression. # P < 0.05 and ## P < 0.01 compared with untreated control. *P < 0.05 and **P < 0.01 compared with MPTP treated alone.
Figure 6MPTP induces deficit of swimming behavior in zebrafish. (a) Typical swimming patterns of control and MPTP-treated zebrafish. Lines show the track of zebrafish movement. Zebrafish treated with MPTP was less active as compared to the control. (b) Quantitative analysis of total distance travelled. # P < 0.05 compared with untreated control. *P < 0.05 compared with MPTP treated alone.
Potential marker genes for epilepsy.
| Function | Gene | Assessment method | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transcription factor | c-Fos | Immunohistochemistry, | [ |
| c-Jun | Electrophoretic mobility-shift assay | [ | |
| CREB | Real-time PCR, northern blot | [ | |
| Zac 1 | Immunohistochemistry, | [ | |
| Receptor | NMDAR1 | Immunohistochemistry, Western blot | [ |
| GABA(A)-receptor delta | Immunohistochemistry | [ | |
| Ion channel | Kv1.2 and Kv4.2 |
| [ |
| Transporter | GLUT1 and GLUT3 |
| [ |
Potential biomarkers for human heart disease.
| Gene | Function | Assessment method | Associated cardiovascular disease |
|---|---|---|---|
| Troponin T | Myocardial contraction | ELISA | Congestive heart failure [ |
| Heart fatty acid binding protein | Carrier proteins for fatty acids and other lipophilic substances, such as eicosanoids and retinoids | ELISA | Congestive heart failure [ |
| Myosin light chain-I | Myocardial contraction | ELISA | Congestive heart failure [ |
| Creatine kinase MB | Energy metabolism | ELISA | Congestive heart failure [ |
| Cardiotrophin-1 | Response to stress and humoral factors such as angiotensin II | ELISA | Hypertension [ |
| Endothelin-1 | Potent endothelium-derived vasoconstrictor peptide | Radioimmunoassay | Heart failure [ |
Figure 7Sutent-induced cardiotoxicity in zebrafish embryos. Embryos at 5 dpf were treated with Sutent for 72 h followed by assessment of cardiac function. (a) Pericardial edema was observed after administration of Sutent compared to the control. The severity of pericardial edema was quantified by measuring the distance between sinus venosus (SV) and bulbus arteriosus (BA). (b) Embryo heart rate was decreased by treatment with Sutent in dose-dependent manner.
Figure 8Atorvastatin-induced cerebral hemorrhage in zebrafish embryos. Tg(fli1:EGFP); Tg(gata1:dsred) homozygous double transgenic zebrafish embryos at 24 hpf were treated with atorvastatin alone or with atorvastatin and mevalonate (MEV) in combination for 24 h. Images showing blood vessels (EGFP, green) were superimposed on images showing blood flow (DsRed, red). Hemorrhage observed in the atorvastatin treatment group was prevented by cotreatment with MEV. Fluorescent microscopic images are at magnification 100x.