单胺类神经递质
斑马鱼
利血平
低能
安非他明
达尼奥
神经科学
多巴胺
心理学
药理学
血清素
生物
医学
内科学
受体
生物化学
基因
作者
Evan J. Kyzar,Adam Stewart,Samuel Landsman,Christopher Collins,Michael J. Gebhardt,Kyle Robinson,Allan V. Kalueff
出处
期刊:Brain Research
[Elsevier]
日期:2013-07-01
卷期号:1527: 108-116
被引量:79
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.brainres.2013.06.033
摘要
Brain monoamines play a key role in the regulation of behavior. Reserpine depletes monoamines, and causes depression and hypoactivity in humans and rodents. In contrast, d-amphetamine increases brain monoamines' levels, and evokes hyperactivity and anxiety. However, the effects of these agents on behavior and in relation to monoamine levels remain poorly understood, necessitating further experimental studies to understand their psychotropic action. Zebrafish (Danio rerio) are rapidly emerging as a promising model organism for drug screening and translational neuroscience research. Here, we have examined the acute and long-term effects of reserpine and d-amphetamine on zebrafish behavior in the novel tank test. Overall, d-amphetamine (5 and 10 mg/L) evokes anxiogenic-like effects in zebrafish acutely, but not 7 days later. In contrast, reserpine (20 and 40 mg/L) did not evoke overt acute behavioral effects, but markedly reduced activity 7 days later, resembling motor retardation observed in depression and/or Parkinson's disease. Three-dimensional 'temporal' (X, Y, time) reconstructions of zebrafish locomotion further supports these findings, confirming the utility of 3D-based video-tracking analyses in zebrafish models of drug action. Our results show that zebrafish are highly sensitive to drugs bi-directionally modulating brain monoamines, generally paralleling rodent and clinical findings. Collectively, this emphasizes the potential of zebrafish tests to model complex brain disorders associated with monoamine dysregulation.
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