Sustained Effects of Developmental Exposure to Ethanol on Zebrafish Anxiety-Like Behaviour.

In zebrafish developmentally exposed to ambient ethanol (20mM-50mM) 1-9 days post fertilization (dpf), the cortisol response to stress has been shown to be significantly attenuated in larvae, juveniles and 6 month old adults. These data are somewhat at variance with similar studies in mammals, which...

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Main Authors: Matteo Baiamonte, Matthew O Parker, Gavin P Vinson, Caroline H Brennan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4749633?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-7ac7e4b80ee146ab8465fece591508172020-11-25T01:52:31ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01112e014842510.1371/journal.pone.0148425Sustained Effects of Developmental Exposure to Ethanol on Zebrafish Anxiety-Like Behaviour.Matteo BaiamonteMatthew O ParkerGavin P VinsonCaroline H BrennanIn zebrafish developmentally exposed to ambient ethanol (20mM-50mM) 1-9 days post fertilization (dpf), the cortisol response to stress has been shown to be significantly attenuated in larvae, juveniles and 6 month old adults. These data are somewhat at variance with similar studies in mammals, which often show heightened stress responses. To test whether these cortisol data correlate with behavioural changes in treated animals, anxiety-like behaviour of zebrafish larvae (9dpf and 10dpf) and juveniles (23dpf) was tested in locomotor assays designed to this end. In open field tests treated animals were more exploratory, spending significantly less time at the periphery of the arena. Behavioural effects of developmental exposure to ethanol were sustained in 6-month-old adults, as judged by assessment of thigmotaxis, novel tank diving and scototaxis. Like larvae and juveniles, developmentally treated adults were generally more exploratory, and spent less time at the periphery of the arena in thigmotaxis tests, less time at the bottom of the tank in the novel tank diving tests, and less time in the dark area in scototaxis tests. The conclusion that ethanol-exposed animals showed less anxiety-like behaviour was validated by comparison with the effects of diazepam treatment, which in thigmotaxis and novel tank diving tests had similar effects to ethanol pretreatment. There is thus a possible link between the hypophyseal-pituitary-interrenal axis and the behavioural actions of developmental ethanol exposure. The mechanisms require further elucidation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4749633?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matteo Baiamonte
Matthew O Parker
Gavin P Vinson
Caroline H Brennan
spellingShingle Matteo Baiamonte
Matthew O Parker
Gavin P Vinson
Caroline H Brennan
Sustained Effects of Developmental Exposure to Ethanol on Zebrafish Anxiety-Like Behaviour.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Matteo Baiamonte
Matthew O Parker
Gavin P Vinson
Caroline H Brennan
author_sort Matteo Baiamonte
title Sustained Effects of Developmental Exposure to Ethanol on Zebrafish Anxiety-Like Behaviour.
title_short Sustained Effects of Developmental Exposure to Ethanol on Zebrafish Anxiety-Like Behaviour.
title_full Sustained Effects of Developmental Exposure to Ethanol on Zebrafish Anxiety-Like Behaviour.
title_fullStr Sustained Effects of Developmental Exposure to Ethanol on Zebrafish Anxiety-Like Behaviour.
title_full_unstemmed Sustained Effects of Developmental Exposure to Ethanol on Zebrafish Anxiety-Like Behaviour.
title_sort sustained effects of developmental exposure to ethanol on zebrafish anxiety-like behaviour.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description In zebrafish developmentally exposed to ambient ethanol (20mM-50mM) 1-9 days post fertilization (dpf), the cortisol response to stress has been shown to be significantly attenuated in larvae, juveniles and 6 month old adults. These data are somewhat at variance with similar studies in mammals, which often show heightened stress responses. To test whether these cortisol data correlate with behavioural changes in treated animals, anxiety-like behaviour of zebrafish larvae (9dpf and 10dpf) and juveniles (23dpf) was tested in locomotor assays designed to this end. In open field tests treated animals were more exploratory, spending significantly less time at the periphery of the arena. Behavioural effects of developmental exposure to ethanol were sustained in 6-month-old adults, as judged by assessment of thigmotaxis, novel tank diving and scototaxis. Like larvae and juveniles, developmentally treated adults were generally more exploratory, and spent less time at the periphery of the arena in thigmotaxis tests, less time at the bottom of the tank in the novel tank diving tests, and less time in the dark area in scototaxis tests. The conclusion that ethanol-exposed animals showed less anxiety-like behaviour was validated by comparison with the effects of diazepam treatment, which in thigmotaxis and novel tank diving tests had similar effects to ethanol pretreatment. There is thus a possible link between the hypophyseal-pituitary-interrenal axis and the behavioural actions of developmental ethanol exposure. The mechanisms require further elucidation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4749633?pdf=render
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