| Literature DB >> 32428631 |
Qiaosen Shen1, Lisa Truong2, Michael T Simonich3, Changjiang Huang4, Robyn L Tanguay5, Qiaoxiang Dong6.
Abstract
Behavior phenotypes are a powerful means of uncovering subtle xenobiotic chemical impacts on vertebrate nervous system development. Rodents manifest complex and informative behavior phenotypes but are generally not practical models in which to screen large numbers of chemicals. Zebrafish recapitulate much of the behavioral complexity of higher vertebrates, develop externally and are amenable to assay automation. Short duration automated assays can be leveraged to screen large numbers of chemicals or comprehensive dose-response for fewer chemicals. Here we describe a series of mostly automated assays including larval photomotor response, strobe light response, blue color avoidance, shoaling and mirror stimulus-response performed on the ZebraBox (ViewPoint Behavior Technologies) instrument platform. To explore the sensitivity and uniqueness of each assay endpoint, larval cohorts from 5 to 28 days post fertilization were acutely exposed to several chemicals broadly understood to impact different neuro-activities. We highlight the throughput advantages of using the same instrument platform for multiple assays and the ability of different assays to detect unique phenotypes among different chemicals.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral paradigm; Neurobehavioral; Rapid throughput screening; Zebrafish
Year: 2020 PMID: 32428631 PMCID: PMC7341899 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2020.112625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Res ISSN: 0166-4328 Impact factor: 3.332