| Literature DB >> 30917585 |
Ram Manohar Basnet1, Daniela Zizioli2, Somrat Taweedet3, Dario Finazzi4,5, Maurizio Memo6.
Abstract
Zebrafish larvae show a clear and distinct pattern of swimming in response to light and dark conditions, following the development of a swim bladder at 4 days post fertilization. This swimming behavior is increasingly employed in the screening of neuroactive drugs. The recent emergence of high-throughput techniques for the automatic tracking of zebrafish larvae has further allowed an objective and efficient way of finding subtle behavioral changes that could go unnoticed during manual observations. This review highlights the use of zebrafish larvae as a high-throughput behavioral model for the screening of neuroactive compounds. We describe, in brief, the behavior repertoire of zebrafish larvae. Then, we focus on the utilization of light-dark locomotion test in identifying and screening of neuroactive compounds.Entities:
Keywords: behavior; high-throughput screening; light-dark test; neuroactive drugs; neuropharmacology; zebrafish larvae
Year: 2019 PMID: 30917585 PMCID: PMC6465999 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines7010023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1General scheme of the light-dark locomotion test. Zebrafish larvae were placed in a 96-well plate with one larva per well and 300 µL of fish water. The plate containing the larvae was then placed in a Danio vision observation chamber following which the high-throughput tracking of zebrafish larvae was performed. The experiment duration was 2 h and 30 min and consisted of: 30 min of acclimatization, followed by 6 cycles of alternating light and dark periods. Each point in the graph represents the mean ± SEM (standard error of mean) of the distance moved by zebrafish larvae in 2 min of time bins. The shaded part represents the dark period and the unshaded part represents the light period. The total number of embryos used was 12 (n = 12).
Light-dark locomotion test protocols used by various studies for testing neuroactive compounds.
| Compounds | Stage and Well Plate | Protocol | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aconitine | 4–6 dpf, 48 and 96 well plates | 4 successive cycles of 10 min alternating light and dark. | [ |
| Ag+ and AgNPs (silver nanoparticles) | 5 dpf, 48 well plate | 18 alternating dark and light cycles of 5 min each. | [ |
| Apomorphine | 6 dpf, 96 well plate | 10 min acclimatization in dark followed by 2 cycles of 10 min of light and 20 mins of dark. | [ |
| Bisphenol A (BPA) | 4–5 dpf, 96 well plate | 20 mins of light followed by 10 min of dark and 10 min of light. | [ |
| Chlorpyrifos | 6 dpf, 96 well plate | 10 min acclimatization followed by 10 min alternating light and dark for 2 times. | [ |
| Cocaine | 6 dpf, 96 well plate | 20 mins acclimatization in dark followed by 10 min of alternating light and dark for 70 min. | [ |
| Copper | 5 dpf, 96 well plate | 4 successive cycles of 10 min alternating light and dark. | [ |
| Copper ions, copper oxide nanoparticles | 4 dpf, 24 well plate | 18 alternating cycles of 5 min of light and 5 min of dark. | [ |
| Diphenylhydantoin | 5 dpf, 24 well plate | 10 min acclimatization followed by 30 min of light and 5 min of dark. | [ |
| Ethanol | 6 dpf, 96 well plate | 20 mins acclimatization in dark followed by 10 min in dark and 10 min in light, then 20 mins in dark, and then another cycle of 10 min of light and 20 mins of dark. | [ |
| Ethanol | 6 dpf, 96 well plate | 15 min in dark followed by 15 min in light and 15 min in dark. | [ |
| Ethanol | 9-10 dpf, | 5 min acclimatization in light followed by 15 min of dark and 5 min of light. | [ |
| Inorganic arsenic | 7 dpf, 24 well plate | Acclimatization for 10 min followed by 2 successive cycles of 10 min of light and 10 min of dark. | [ |
| MK-801; | 7 dpf, 24 well plate | 60 min in light followed by 5 min in dark. | [ |
| Pentylenetetrazole | 5 and 7 dpf, 24 well plate | 10 min acclimatization in light followed by 40 min of light and then 3 successive cycles of 10 min of light and 5 min of dark. | [ |
| Pentylenetetrazole | 5 dpf, 24 well plate | 25 min of acclimatization | [ |
| Perfluorooctane sulphate (PFOS) | 6 dpf, 48 well plate | 15 min acclimatization followed by 10 min in dark and 10 min in light. | [ |
| Polybrominated diphenyl ethers and their hydroxyl metabolites (OH-BDEs MeO-BDEs) | 5, 6 and 7 dpf, | 10 min light adaptation followed by two repeated cycles of 10 min of dark and 10 min of light. | [ |
| 2,2’,4,4’-Tetrabromodiphenyl | 5 dpf, 24 well plate | 70 min of alternating 10 min of light and 10 min of dark starting with a light cycle. | [ |
| Tributyltin | 4 dpf, 96 well plate | 50 min of alternating 10 min of light and 10 min of dark starting with a dark cycle. | [ |
| Venlafaxine | 5 dpf, 96 well plate | Acclimatization for 1 h followed by 60 min of alternating cycles of 7.5 min of light and 7.5 min of dark. | [ |
| Yohimbine | 5 and 7 dpf, 24 well plate | 10 min of acclimatization with light followed by 40 min of light and three 15 min cycles of 10 min of light and 5 min of dark. | [ |
Figure 2Swimming pattern of AB wild type zebrafish larvae after drug treatment. Zebrafish larvae (n = 12 for each drug) at 5 dpf were exposed to sterile water (used as control), adrenaline 0.03 mM (6 mg/L), and tricaine 0.02 mM (5.25 mg/L). The total volume of drug solution or sterile water used was 300 µL per well. The exposure was started half an hour before the experiment and continued till the conclusion of the experiment. The experiment protocol was the same as described in Figure 1. The results were calculated as mean ± SEM of the distance moved by each experimental group in 2 min of time bins. Adrenaline-treated zebrafish larvae showed increased movement throughout the experiment (A). On the contrary, tricaine-treated zebrafish larvae showed decreased movement throughout the experiment (B). n = 12 for each experimental group.