A choice behavior for morphine reveals experience-dependent drug preference and underlying neural substrates in developing larval zebrafish
by
Bretaud S, Li Q, Lockwood BL, Kobayashi K, Lin E, Guo S.
Department of Biopharmaceutical Sciences,
University of California,
San Francisco, CA 94143-2811, USA.
Neuroscience. 2007 May 25;146(3):1109-16.


ABSTRACT

Transparent larval zebrafish offer the opportunity to unravel genetic and neuronal networks underlying behavior in a developing system. In this study, we developed a choice chamber paradigm to measure reward-associated behavior in larval zebrafish. In the chamber where larval zebrafish have a choice of spending their time in either a water- or morphine-containing compartment, larvae that have previously experienced morphine spend significantly more time in the compartment containing morphine. This behavior can be attentuated by pre-treatment with antagonists of the opioid receptor or the dopamine receptor, and furthermore, is impaired in the too few mutant, which has a genetic deficiency in the production of specific groups of dopaminergic and serotonergic neurons in the ventral forebrain. These results uncover a choice behavior for an addictive substance in larval zebrafish that is mediated through central opioid and monoaminergic neurotransmitter systems.
Pain
NMDA
Morphine
Fentanyl
Alfentanil
Sufentanil
Remifentanil
Endomorphins
Opioids and anaesthesia
Opioids, mood and cognition
Zebrafish dissociation of food and opiate preference by genetic mutation


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