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MPTP-Treated Zebrafish Recapitulate 'Late-Stage' Parkinson's-like Cognitive Decline.

Alim A O BashirzadeSergey V CheresizAlisa S BelovaAlexey V DrobkovAnastasiia D KorotaevaSoheil Azizi-AraniAmirhossein AzimiradEric OdleEmma-Yanina V GildOleg V ArdashovKonstantin P VolchoDmitrii V BozhkoVladislav O MyrovSofia M KolchanovaAleksander I PolovianGeorgii K GalumovNariman F SalakhutdinovTamara G AmstislavskayaAllan V Kalueff
Published in: Toxics (2022)
The zebrafish is a promising model species in biomedical research, including neurotoxicology and neuroactive drug screening. 1-Methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) evokes degeneration of dopaminergic neurons and is commonly used to model Parkinson's disease (PD) in laboratory animals, including zebrafish. However, cognitive phenotypes in MPTP-evoked experimental PD models remain poorly understood. Here, we established an LD 50 (292 mg/kg) for intraperitoneal MPTP administration in adult zebrafish, and report impaired spatial working memory (poorer spontaneous alternation in the Y-maze) in a PD model utilizing fish treated with 200 µg of this agent. In addition to conventional behavioral analyses, we also employed artificial intelligence (AI)-based approaches to independently and without bias characterize MPTP effects on zebrafish behavior during the Y-maze test. These analyses yielded a distinct cluster for 200-μg MPTP (vs. other) groups, suggesting that high-dose MPTP produced distinct, computationally detectable patterns of zebrafish swimming. Collectively, these findings support MPTP treatment in adult zebrafish as a late-stage experimental PD model with overt cognitive phenotypes.
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