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Zebrafish behavioral profiling identifies multitarget antipsychotic-like compounds.

Giancarlo Noe BruniAndrew J RennekampAndrea VelenichMatthew McCarrollLeo GendelevEthan FertschJack TaylorParth LakhaniDennis LensenTama EvronPaul J LorelloXi-Ping HuangSabine KolczewskiGalen CareyBarbara J CaldaroneEric PrinssenBryan L RothMichael J KeiserRandall T PetersonDavid Kokel
Published in: Nature chemical biology (2016)
Many psychiatric drugs act on multiple targets and therefore require screening assays that encompass a wide target space. With sufficiently rich phenotyping and a large sampling of compounds, it should be possible to identify compounds with desired mechanisms of action on the basis of behavioral profiles alone. Although zebrafish (Danio rerio) behavior has been used to rapidly identify neuroactive compounds, it is not clear what types of behavioral assays would be necessary to identify multitarget compounds such as antipsychotics. Here we developed a battery of behavioral assays in larval zebrafish to determine whether behavioral profiles can provide sufficient phenotypic resolution to identify and classify psychiatric drugs. Using the antipsychotic drug haloperidol as a test case, we found that behavioral profiles of haloperidol-treated zebrafish could be used to identify previously uncharacterized compounds with desired antipsychotic-like activities and multitarget mechanisms of action.
Keyphrases
  • high throughput
  • mental health
  • emergency department
  • single cell
  • dna methylation
  • drug induced
  • genome wide
  • single molecule