Utility of the Zebrafish Model for Studying Neuronal and Behavioral Disturbances Induced by Embryonic Exposure to Alcohol, Nicotine, and Cannabis

Author:

Collier Adam D.1,Abdulai Abdul R.1,Leibowitz Sarah F.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Behavioral Neurobiology, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065, USA

Abstract

It is estimated that 5% of pregnant women consume drugs of abuse during pregnancy. Clinical research suggests that intake of drugs during pregnancy, such as alcohol, nicotine and cannabis, disturbs the development of neuronal systems in the offspring, in association with behavioral disturbances early in life and an increased risk of developing drug use disorders. After briefly summarizing evidence in rodents, this review focuses on the zebrafish model and its inherent advantages for studying the effects of embryonic exposure to drugs of abuse on behavioral and neuronal development, with an emphasis on neuropeptides known to promote drug-related behaviors. In addition to stimulating the expression and density of peptide neurons, as in rodents, zebrafish studies demonstrate that embryonic drug exposure has marked effects on the migration, morphology, projections, anatomical location, and peptide co-expression of these neurons. We also describe studies using advanced methodologies that can be applied in vivo in zebrafish: first, to demonstrate a causal relationship between the drug-induced neuronal and behavioral disturbances and second, to discover underlying molecular mechanisms that mediate these effects. The zebrafish model has great potential for providing important information regarding the development of novel and efficacious therapies for ameliorating the effects of early drug exposure.

Funder

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism of the National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference273 articles.

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3. Embryonic Ethanol Exposure Affects the Early Development, Migration, and Location of Hypocretin/Orexin Neurons in Zebrafish;Collier;Alcohol. Clin. Exp. Res.,2019

4. Collier, A.D., Yasmin, N., Karatayev, O., Abdulai, A.R., Yu, B., Fam, M., Campbell, S., and Leibowitz, S.F. (2023). Embryonic ethanol exposure and optogenetic activation of hypocretin neurons stimulate similar behaviors early in life associated with later alcohol consumption. Cells, in press.

5. Collier, A.D., Yasmin, N., Chang, G.Q., Karatayev, O., Khalizova, N., Fam, M., Abdulai, A.R., Yu, B., and Leibowitz, S.F. (2022). Embryonic ethanol exposure induces ectopic Hcrt and MCH neurons outside hypothalamus in rats and zebrafish: Role in ethanol-induced behavioural disturbances. Addict. Biol., 27.

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