Zebrafish get oriented
research highlights
SOFTWARE
DRUG SCREENING
Nat Protoc 13, 1539–1568 (2018)
Dis. Model Mech. 11, dmm033811 (2018)
Following fish eyes
Researchers in Germany have an eyetracking solution for those who use zebrafish
to study the links between visual input and
oculomotor output. They’ve developed
ZebEyeTrack and ZebEyeTrack Light,
open-source software programs that can
track the eye movements of up to six larval
zebrafish at a time. The programs can
analyze existing videos or, with a compatible
camera, record and analyze new ones
in real time. Optional external hardware,
such as laser diodes and optical fibers
for optogenetic manipulations, can be
combined with the full version.
The authors assert that ZebEyeTrack
is cheaper and more flexible than
commercial tracking set-ups and quicker
than processing eye movement manually.
Hardware and software requirements
as well as step-by-step instructions
can be found in Nature Protocols.
EPN
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41684-018-0142-4
Neuroscience
Tamed brains
Fly screens for FA
Friedreich’s ataxia (FA) is a degenerative
disorder caused by mutations to the
mitochondrial protein frataxin. Muscles,
including those of the heart, waste over
time, and cardiomyopathy is the leading
cause of death. Researchers at Universite
Paris Diderot previously described a
frataxin-deficient Drosophila line that
models FA cardiomyopathies. In their latest
paper, they use their fly model to screen
1280 drugs that have been approved
for use in humans.
Some drugs made things worse—five
were toxic—but eleven improved cardiac
function in the flies; most effective was the
chemotherapy drug paclitaxel. Paclitaxel
stabilizes microtubules; in the heart, these
cytoskeletal fibers contribute to proper
cardiac function. The drug can be toxic
so the authors don’t recommend it for
therapeutic use, but they suggest that its
efficacy indicates a novel mechanism to
investigate further.
EPN
SMALL ANIMAL
EAR TAGS
AND MARKERS
Markers
Fine Tip
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41684-018-0143-3
PNAS 115, 7380–7385 (2018)
SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
Domesticated animals tend to be tamer
than their wild counterparts. The rabbit was
domesticated relatively recently compared
to other animals, and there are considerable
behavioral differences between rabbits that
are accustomed to humans and those that are
not. The difference could be all in their heads.
An international team of researchers
previously sequenced the genomes of wild
and domesticated rabbits and observed
changes in areas involved in brain
development. They recently explored if those
genetic differences resulted in morphological
differences too. They gave eight tame and
eight wild rabbits from Spain postmortem
MRIs. The domestic rabbits had smaller
brains relative to their body size compared
to wild animals, with smaller amygdala but
larger medial prefrontal cortex volumes.
The former responds to fear, while the latter
tempers responses to negative experiences.
These changes support the notion that
domesticated animals have indeed lost some
of their innate fear of man.
EPN
Curr. Biol. 28, 2445–2451.e3 (2018)
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41684-018-0144-2
Lab Animal
Identification
Standard Tip
Zebrafish get oriented
Zebrafish are social animals—that
makes them useful for studying the
mechanisms that underlie social behavior.
To better understand how zebrafish
socialize, researchers at the University
of Oregon have developed a new visual
assay. They devised two tanks separated
by an electrochromic film that can either
be transparent or opaque. When fish in
the tanks were allowed to see each other,
they noticeably changed their swimming
orientation towards one another. Dosing
the tanks with a dopamine receptor agonist,
which disrupts social interactions in mice,
impaired the behavior in the zebrafish
too. Physically and genetically altering
the telencephalon, a region of the fish
brain involved with social behavior that
is homologous to structures in mammals,
yielded similar results.
EPN
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41684-018-0145-1
Clark Nelson and Ellen P. Neff
Lab Animal | VOL 47 | SEPTEMBER 2018 | 231–236 | www.nature.com/laban
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