| Literature DB >> 30363733 |
Zain Z Zakaria1,2, Fatiha M Benslimane1, Gheyath K Nasrallah1,3, Samar Shurbaji1, Nadin N Younes3, Fatima Mraiche4, Sahar I Da'as5, Huseyin C Yalcin1.
Abstract
Over the last decade, the zebrafish (Danio rerio) has emerged as a model organism for cardiovascular research. Zebrafish have several advantages over mammalian models. For instance, the experimental cost of using zebrafish is comparatively low; the embryos are transparent, develop externally, and have high fecundity making them suitable for large-scale genetic screening. More recently, zebrafish embryos have been used for the screening of a variety of toxic agents, particularly for cardiotoxicity testing. Zebrafish has been shown to exhibit physiological responses that are similar to mammals after exposure to medicinal drugs including xenobiotics, hormones, cancer drugs, and also environmental pollutants, including pesticides and heavy metals. In this review, we provided a summary for recent studies that have used zebrafish to investigate the molecular mechanisms of drug-induced cardiotoxicity. More specifically, we focused on the techniques that were exploited by us and others for cardiovascular toxicity assessment and described several microscopic imaging and analysis protocols that are being used for the estimation of a variety of cardiac hemodynamic parameters.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30363733 PMCID: PMC6180974 DOI: 10.1155/2018/1642684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Overview of zebrafish heart development. By 14 hpf, cardiac progenitors have emerged from the anterior lateral plate mesoderm. These cardiac precursors migrate and fuse at the midline to form a cone structure by 19 hpf. After one day of development, a beating linear heart tube has formed to propel circulation through the body. Cardiac chambers are clearly demarcated and looping has completed after two days of development.VM, ventricle myocardium; AM, atrium myocardium; EC, endocardium; (upper panel) stage of development and hour postfertalisation, hpf, and (lower panel) genes that regulate the developmental processes. Gata5, Transcription factor required during cardiovascular development; Hand2, Heart And Neural Crest Derivatives Expressed 2;Tbx20, T-Box Transcription Factor; Smarcd3,4, SWI/SNF Related, Matrix Associated, Actin Dependent Regulator Of Chromatin, Subfamily D, Member 3and 4; CTR1, copper transporter; Cdc37, Cell Division Cycle 37; RTF1, Paf1, LEO1, RNA Polymerase II Complex Component.
Figure 2View point's ZebraLab software user interface.
Figure 3DanioScope system and EthoVision XT9.0 analysis platform. A. DanioScope recognizes the embryos and can analyze videos with multiple animals simultaneously and DanioScope reports back (table A) the following parameters: burst activity (percentage of time the embryo was moving), Inactivity (percentage of time of inactivity); burst duration (total time spent active); inactivity duration (total time spent inactive); burst count (number of times the embryo moved); Burst count/per minute. B. DanioScope measures activity in the heart of each larvae, from this activity the heartbeat in beats per second or per minute is extracted graph B. C. Flow activity can be measured in both blood vessels and the gut.
Comparison of cardiotoxicities for several clinical drugs on human and zebrafish.
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| Cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia, negative inotropic effects (affect the muscle contraction), or QT prolongation. | Bradycardia, Acute atrioventricular block (AV block), Slow circulation |
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| QT prolongation | Pericardial edema, hemorrhage, bradycardia, and death at higher concentrations |
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| QT prolongation | AV block |
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| Bradycardia | Pericardial edema |
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| Decreased heart rate | Decreased heart rate |
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Figure 4Cardiotoxicity evaluation results adapted from Cornet et al. [24]. (a) Scheme of the experimental process; (b) bar charts representing the heart beat frequency in beats per minute (bpm); (c) QT corrected interval (QTc); (d) ejection fraction (EJF); (e) and longest cardiac arrest of 100 h old zebrafish larvae.
Figure 5Magnification X= .63. Typical phenotype of a zebrafish embryo incubated from 24-hpf to 96-hpf in (a) embryo medium as a negative control, in (b) 10 µm diethyl-aminobenzaldehyde (DEAB), and in (c) 100 µm DEAB. Note the deformed embryos in DEAB: short size, scoliosis, yolk, and heart edema (black arrows).