Aquatic Toxicology of Fluoxetine: Understanding the Knowns and the Unknowns
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2014
School
Psychology
Abstract
Fluoxetine is one of the most prescribed psychotropic medications, and is an agent of increasing interest for environmental toxicology. Fish and other aquatic organisms are excellent models to study neuroactive small molecules like fluoxetine. However, prone to variance due to experimental factors, data obtained in these models need to be interpreted with caution, using proper experimental protocols, study designs, validated endpoints as well as well-established models and tests. Choosing the treatment protocol and dose range for fluoxetine and other serotonergic drugs is critical for obtaining valid test results and correct data interpretation. Here we discuss the value of aquatic models to study fluoxetine effects, based on prior high-quality research, and outline the directions of future translational studies in the field. We review fluoxetine-evoked phenotypes in acute vs. chronic protocols, discussing them in the contact of complex role of serotonin in behavioral regulation. We conclude that zebrafish and other aquatic models represent a useful in-vivo tool for fluoxetine pharmacology and (eco)toxicology research.
Publication Title
Aquatic Toxicology
Volume
156
First Page
269
Last Page
273
Recommended Citation
Stewart, A.,
Grossman, L.,
Nguyen, M.,
Maximino, C.,
Rosemberg, D.,
Echevarria, D.,
Kalueff, A.
(2014). Aquatic Toxicology of Fluoxetine: Understanding the Knowns and the Unknowns. Aquatic Toxicology, 156, 269-273.
Available at: https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/19868