Modeling Consequences of Prolonged Strong Unpredictable Stress in Zebrafish: Complex Effects On Behavior and Physiology

Cai Song, Guangdong Ocean University
Bai-Ping Liu, Guangdong Ocean University
Yong-Ping Zhang, Guangdong Ocean University
Zhilan Peng, Guangdong Ocean University
JiaJia Wang, Guangdong Ocean University
Adam D. Collier, ZENEREI Institute and the International Zebrafish Neuroscience Research Consortium
David J. Echevarria, University of Southern Mississippi
Katerina V. Savelieva, ZENEREI Institute and the International Zebrafish Neuroscience Research Consortium
Robert F. Lawrence, Afraxis, Inc.
Christopher S. Rex, Afraxis, Inc.
Darya A. Meshalkina, St. Petersburg State University
Allan V. Kalueff, Guangdong Ocean University

Abstract

Chronic stress is the major pathogenetic factor of human anxiety and depression. Zebrafish (Danio rerio) have become a novel popular model species for neuroscience research and CNS drug discovery. The utility of zebrafish for mimicking human affective disorders is also rapidly growing. Here, we present a new zebrafish model of clinically relevant, prolonged unpredictable strong chronic stress (PUCS). The 5-week PUCS induced overt anxiety-like and motor retardation-like behaviors in adult zebrafish, also elevating whole-body cortisol and proinflammatory cytokines - interleukins IL-1β and IL-6. PUCS also elevated whole-body levels of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 and increased the density of dendritic spines in zebrafish telencephalic neurons. Chronic treatment of fish with an antidepressant fluoxetine (0.1 mg/L for 8 days) normalized their behavioral and endocrine phenotypes, as well as corrected stress-elevated IL-1β and IL-6 levels, similar to clinical and rodent data. The CNS expression of the bdnf gene, the two genes of its receptors (trkB, p75), and the gfap gene of glia biomarker, the glial fibrillary acidic protein, was unaltered in all three groups. However, PUCS elevated whole-body BDNF levels and the telencephalic dendritic spine density (which were corrected by fluoxetine), thereby somewhat differing from the effects of chronic stress in rodents. Together, these findings support zebrafish as a useful in-vivo model of chronic stress, also calling for further cross-species studies of both shared/overlapping and distinct neurobiological responses to chronic stress.