Skip to content

The suitability of zebrafish (danio rerio) as an optimal organism to further investigate the associated schizophrenia-like phenotype

I. B. Nita, O. D. Ilie, A. S. Ciobica, L. D. Hritcu, C. Solcan, R. P. Dobrin

European Psychiatry October 23, 2023 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1192/j.eurpsy.2023.945 via DOAJ

Summary

A review of 246 studies from 2010 to 2022 highlights an increasing interest in using zebrafish to study compounds that may induce schizophrenia-like symptoms. Notably, agents like MK-801, ketamine, and amphetamine are more frequently researched compared to mescaline and LSD. Findings across these studies show contradictory effects on behaviors such as locomotion and memory, indicating the need for further investigation.

Study at a glance

Design systematic review
Sample size 246
Population studies examining pharmacological treatments in zebrafish related to schizophrenia-like symptoms
Key finding There is a rising trend in literature focusing on MK-801, ketamine, amphetamine, proline, methionine, and phencyclidine for inducing schizophrenia-like symptoms, with many results showing contradictory behavioral outcomes.

Abstract

Introduction Zebrafish (Danio rerio) has evolved over the years as a preferred organism due to its vast repertoire in research fields that mimic a targeted phenotype, particularly behavioral typologies and specific attributes comparable to murine models and relatively high homology with humans. Considering this consideration, different pharmacological treatments have been tested and proven that under different concentrations may trigger schizophrenia (SCZ)-like symptoms. Objectives Starting from the actual stage of knowledge according to which agents used as N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) inhibitors (MK-801, ketamine, and phencyclidine) alongside psychedelic (mescaline, lysergic acid diethylamide), psychoactive substances (amphetamine), and non- and essential amino acids (proline and methionine), we aimed to reunite and review all existing evidence. This approach may offer an updated and critical overview regarding the possible future directions surrounding these compounds regarding the pharmaco-dynamics/kinetics. Methods To ensure the coverage of all relevant literature, we performed searches in four databases (PubMed/Medline, ISI Web of Knowledge, Scopus, and ScienceDirect) per combinations of keywords: “schizophrenia” with “MK-801”, “ketamine”, “phencyclidine”, “mescaline”, “lysergic acid diethylamide”, “amphetamine”, “proline”, “methionine”, and “zebrafish”. Eligible studies had to be “research article(s)” written in English. Results A total of n = 246 studies were returned during the established interval (2010 – 2022). Precisely, n = 16 were identified in PubMed/Medline, n = 16 in ISI Web of Knowledge, n = 17 in Scopus, and n = 197 in ScienceDirect per database. If taken per year, n = 13 were published in 2010, n = 12 in 2011, n = 15 in 2012, n = 24 in 2013, n = 21 in 2014, n = 21 in 2015, n = 32 in 2016, n = 8 in 2017, n = 12 in 2018, n = 9 in 2019, n = 17 in 2020, n = 34 in 2021, and n = 28 in 2022. Depending on the combination of keywords, we had the following situation: n = 65 for “schizophrenia+MK-801+zebrafish”, n = 42 for “schizophrenia+ketamine+zebrafish”, n = 21 for “schizophrenia+phencyclidine+zebrafish”, n = 4 for “schizophrenia+mescaline+zebrafish”, n = 5 for “schizophrenia+lysergic acid diethylamide+zebrafish”, n = 36 for “schizophrenia+amphetamine+zebrafish”, n = 37 for “schizophrenia+proline+zebrafish”, n = 36 for “schizophrenia+ methionine+zebrafish”. Conclusions There can be seen an uprising trend in the current literature of studies focused on the administration of MK-801, ketamine, amphetamine, proline, methionine, and phencyclidine aiming to trigger SCZ-like symptoms as opposed to mescaline and lysergic acid diethylamide. Most of the data is contradicting, with either a decrease/increase in behavior (locomotion, aggression, sociability, circling behavior, and memory deficits), which is why additional studies are mandatory. Disclosure of Interest None Declared

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment