Discussing the future of amphibians in research

Lab Animal, Nov 2018

Samuel Brod, Lola Brookes, Trenton W. J. Garner

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Discussing the future of amphibians in research

comment Discussing the future of amphibians in research Report of the NC3Rs/ZSL Workshop on Amphibian Welfare. Samuel Brod, Lola Brookes and Trenton W. J. Garner A mphibians have been used as experimental organisms for centuries. Recent years have seen a renewed interest in amphibians as models of human development and disease and an urgent need to understand and mitigate the impacts of the chytridiomycotan and ranaviral pathogens that pose a global threat to these animals. Alongside this increase in laboratory use comes an increased responsibility to conduct research using amphibians with proper consideration made of the unique welfare requirements of this diverse vertebrate class. Despite this, knowledge of the welfare needs of amphibians remains limited, with little scientifically justified guidance or evidencebased refinements for their captive care1–4. On 5th October 2017 the National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research (NC3Rs) and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) jointly hosted a workshop to discuss the welfare of amphibians in research. This workshop brought together experts from academia and the zoo community to identify the key topics in amphibian welfare and identify the next steps that can be taken to help monitor and improve conditions for amphibians in research. The workshop included 72 participants, with specializations ranging from oncology and developmental biology to conservation and epidemiology. The following report summarises the key outcomes of the day and recommendations for research priorities in this area. Summary of workshop talks The demand for Xenopus laevis (Fig. 1) and X. tropicalis as models for disease, development and genetic manipulation has led to an increase in their use and distribution worldwide. The coordinator of the European Xenopus Resource Centre (EXRC; https://xenopusresource.org/), Professor Matthew Guille (University of Portsmouth, UK), discussed the welfare and biosecurity challenges created by the storage and distribution of hundreds of genetically modified Xenopus lines. By improving current methods of sperm recovery and cryopreservation, his centre has significantly reduced the number of male frogs required for research, refined their husbandry, 16 Fig. 1 | Adult Xenopus laevis. Credit: Xenopus Resource Centre, Portsmouth, UK and potentially eliminated the need for transporting male frogs5. Complementing Professor Guille’s talk, Professor Jacques Robert (University of Rochester Medical Center, USA) described how the rapid increase in Xenopus use in laboratories has highlighted the absence of realistic, scientifically based welfare standards for these animals. Professor Robert aided in the update and standardization of the recently published Cold Spring Harbor Protocols guidelines for Xenopus husbandry6. Assessing the welfare of captive amphibians has proven notoriously difficult. Few behavioural or physiological indicators of welfare have been developed or shown to be effective; those that do exist cannot be consistently applied across amphibian species. Dr Lottie Hosie (University of Chester, UK) reported her lab’s efforts to validate such methods, again focusing on Xenopus laevis. She demonstrated that a combination of behavioural (such as activity levels and tank butting) and endocrine (waterborne corticosterone) measures of stress may prove useful in gauging amphibian welfare, but that greater effort and collaboration by researchers is needed to confirm their more general application and to develop additional indicators7,8. Professor Richard Griffiths (University of Kent, UK) outlined the challenges facing effective research on amphibians in the field as well as the limited and sometimes restrictive welfare guidelines that govern their use in scientific procedures (for examples,9,10). These animals have a diverse set of morphologies, habitats and physiological needs, so a one-size-fits-all approach for field work with amphibians seems untenable. Building on this topic, Professor Caren Helbing (University of Victoria, Canada) presented her work developing transcriptomic- and metabolomic-focused sampling methodologies that allow health and population information on multiple amphibian species to be obtained from water samples taken from their habitat.11. Validation of these non-lethal, non-invasive methodologies may pave the way for better assessment of the impact of environmental change, pollutants and infection on amphibian welfare in both the laboratory and field, as well as help to implement the reduction and refinement principles of the 3Rs. Lab Animal | VOL 48 | JANUARY 2019 | 16–18 | www.nature.com/laban comment platform for initiating a concerted effort to optimize amphibian welfare. The obvious choice would be the most commonly used amphibian in laboratory research, Xenopus laevis. However, others commented that such a course would only serve to recapitulate the welfare limitations, as the ecology and natural history of Xenopus species do not represent the majority of frog or toad species; even less so the newts, salamanders and caecilians (Fig. 3). Fig. 2 | Larval Xenopus laevis. Credit: Xenopus Resource Centre, Portsmouth, UK Live infection studies are currently the only effective means of studying the ranavirus epidemic threatening amphibian populations worldwide. Dr Stephen Price (University College London, UK) presented an alternative in vitro model using amphibian cell culture systems to study host-pathogen interactions12. Such research stands to significantly reduce animal use while helping combat this serious disease. Perhaps the greatest practical challenge to increasing scientifically supported amphibian welfare is securing the funding to support the research. Dr Mark Prescott (NC3Rs, UK) closed off the talks by drawing on NC3Rs’ experience of funding 3Rs-relevant science, including the aforementioned work of Guille and Hosie, and highlighted how to write a successful grant application to the NC3Rs and integrate an interest in welfare with wider research aims. Summary of breakout sessions Talks were followed by afternoon breakout sessions that identified subjects of broad importance for improving amphibian welfare in a research setting: The dual problem of multiple species and life history stages. In contrast to many other vertebrate classes, dozens of amphibian species are currently used in research, with diverse and specific housing and husbandry requirements. Compounding this issue, most amphibians have complex life histories, with significantly different housing and husbandry needs as they mature from embryo to larvae to juvenile to adult2 (Fig. 2). These issues were regarded as the major impediment to devising a basic, transferrable set of welfare and husbandry standards for amphibians. One proposed alternative was to select a “flagship species” to serve as the The need for basic, relevant guidelines on amphibian care and husbandry. (...truncated)


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Samuel Brod, Lola Brookes, Trenton W. J. Garner. Discussing the future of amphibians in research, Lab Animal, 2018, pp. 16-18, DOI: 10.1038/s41684-018-0193-6