Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2019

Alcohol exposure during embryonic development: An opportunity to conduct systematic developmental time course analyses in zebrafish

 
 
 

Abstract


HighlightsFetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders present highly variable phenotypes.The developmental stage of alcohol exposure may contribute to this variability.Systematic analyses of developmental stage‐dependent alcohol effects are lacking.The zebrafish allows precise temporal control of embryonic alcohol delivery.The zebrafish allows high throughput behavioural screens. ABSTRACT Ethanol affects numerous neurobiological processes depending upon the developmental stage at which it reaches the vertebrate embryo. Exposure time dependency may explain the variable severity and manifestation of life‐long symptoms observed in fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) patients. Characterization of behavioural deficits will help us understand developmental stage‐dependency and its underlying biological mechanisms. Here we highlight pioneering studies that model FASD using zebrafish, including those that demonstrated developmental stage‐dependency of alcohol effects on some behaviours. We also succinctly review the more expansive mammalian literature, briefly discuss potential developmental stage dependent biological mechanisms alcohol alters, and review some of the disadvantages of mammalian systems versus the zebrafish. We stress that the temporal control of alcohol administration in the externally developing zebrafish gives unprecedented precision and is a major advantage of this species over other model organisms employed so far. We also emphasize that the zebrafish is well suited for high throughput screening and will allow systematic exploration of embryonic‐stage dependent alcohol effects via mutagenesis and drug screens.

Volume 98
Pages 185-193
DOI 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2019.01.012
Language English
Journal Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews

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