The swimming plus-maze test: a novel high-throughput model for assessment of anxiety-related behaviour in larval and juvenile zebrafish (Danio rerio)

Larval zebrafish ( Danio rerio ) has the potential to supplement rodent models due to the availability of resource-efficient, high-throughput screening and high-resolution imaging techniques. Although behavioural models are available in larvae, only a few can be employed to assess anxiety. Here we p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2018-11, Vol.8 (1), p.16590-11, Article 16590
Hauptverfasser: Varga, Zoltán K., Zsigmond, Áron, Pejtsik, Diána, Varga, Máté, Demeter, Kornél, Mikics, Éva, Haller, József, Aliczki, Manó
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 16590
container_title Scientific reports
container_volume 8
creator Varga, Zoltán K.
Zsigmond, Áron
Pejtsik, Diána
Varga, Máté
Demeter, Kornél
Mikics, Éva
Haller, József
Aliczki, Manó
description Larval zebrafish ( Danio rerio ) has the potential to supplement rodent models due to the availability of resource-efficient, high-throughput screening and high-resolution imaging techniques. Although behavioural models are available in larvae, only a few can be employed to assess anxiety. Here we present the swimming plus-maze (SPM) test paradigm, a tool to assess anxiety-related avoidance of shallow water bodies in early developmental stages. The “+” shaped apparatus consists of arms of different depth, representing different levels of aversiveness similarly to the rodent elevated plus-maze. The paradigm was validated (i) in larval and juvenile zebrafish, (ii) after administration of compounds affecting anxiety and (iii) in differentially aversive experimental conditions. Furthermore, we compared the SPM with conventional “anxiety tests” of zebrafish to identify their shared characteristics. We have clarified that the preference of deeper arms is ontogenetically conserved and can be abolished by anxiolytic or enhanced by anxiogenic agents, respectively. The behavioural readout is insensitive to environmental aversiveness and is unrelated to behaviours assessed by conventional tests involving young zebrafish. Taken together, we have developed a sensitive high-throughput test allowing the assessment of anxiety-related responses of zebrafish regardless of developmental stage, granting the opportunity to combine larva-based state-of-the-art methods with detailed behavioral analysis.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41598-018-34989-1
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subjects 631/154
631/378
64/116
Animal models
Anxiety
Danio rerio
Developmental stages
High-throughput screening
Humanities and Social Sciences
Larvae
multidisciplinary
Resource availability
Rodents
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Shallow water
Swimming
Zebrafish
title The swimming plus-maze test: a novel high-throughput model for assessment of anxiety-related behaviour in larval and juvenile zebrafish (Danio rerio)
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