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Acute stress disrupts performance of zebrafish in the cued and spatial memory tests: the utility of fish models to study stress-memory interplay
Authors:Gaikwad Siddharth  Stewart Adam  Hart Peter  Wong Keith  Piet Valerie  Cachat Jonathan  Kalueff Allan V
Affiliation:Department of Pharmacology and Neuroscience Program, Tulane Neurophenotyping Platform, Zebrafish Neuroscience Research Consortium (ZNRC), Tulane University Medical School, 1430 Tulane Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70112, USA
Abstract:The zebrafish (Danio rerio) has emerged as a promising model organism for affective or cognitive neuroscience research, and may be useful to study the interplay between memory and anxiety-related states. To assess the effects of acute psychological stress on spatial and cued memory, adult zebrafish were trained in an aquatic plus-maze for 14 days using food bait as a reward. Two ecologically relevant stressors (alarm pheromone or Indian leaf fish exposure) were applied to acutely stress zebrafish immediately prior to the final (testing) trial. Overall, acute single inescapable stress markedly impaired spatial and cued memory in zebrafish plus-maze test, reducing the number of correct arm entries and time spent in the target arm. This observation parallels rodent and clinical literature on memory-impairing effects of acute stress, strongly supporting the utility of zebrafish in neurobehavioral research.
Keywords:Adult zebrafish   Spatial memory   Cued memory   Stress exposure   Alarm pheromone   Indian leaf fish   Plus-maze test
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