Using Zebrafish Embryos to Study Pharmacological Effects on Neural Development in Hands-On Neurobiology Laboratory Activities

Timothy J. Schoenfeld and Nicole O. Glenn

https://doi.org/10.59390/RAKO7898

ABSTRACT

Undergraduate neurobiology courses cover neural development as a major theme but there are few labs to provide hands-on experience with these topics.  Here we share a 3-week set of lab activities using zebrafish embryos that allow students to see the direct effect of drug exposure on physical and emotional development.  In these labs, student expose new embryos (Lab 1) to the environmental toxin lithium chloride, which inhibits anterior development and produces an eyeless phenotype in fixed larvae (Lab 2), and to psychiatric medications fluoxetine and quetiapine, which alter anxiety-like behavior measured live in grown juveniles (Lab 3).  Lab worksheets ask students to investigate the signaling pathways affected by these drugs and how they might affect neural development in different ways.  Student opinion surveys suggest these lab activities were successful in both providing hands-on work with zebrafish as a model organism for neural development and better understanding of how drugs can impact development of the nervous system.