iScience (Jul 2019)

Abnormal Behavior of Zebrafish Mutant in Dopamine Transporter Is Rescued by Clozapine

  • Guangliang Wang,
  • Guoqiang Zhang,
  • Zhuyun Li,
  • Caroline H. Fawcett,
  • Matthew Coble,
  • Maria X. Sosa,
  • Tingwei Tsai,
  • Kimberly Malesky,
  • Stefan J. Thibodeaux,
  • Peixin Zhu,
  • David J. Glass,
  • Mark C. Fishman

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17
pp. 325 – 333

Abstract

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Summary: Dopamine transporter (SLC6A3) deficiency causes infantile Parkinson disease, for which there is no effective therapy. We have explored the effects of genetically deleting SLC6A3 in zebrafish. Unlike the wild-type, slc6a3−/− fish hover near the tank bottom, with a repetitive digging-like behavior. slc6a3−/− fish manifest pruning and cellular loss of particular tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive neurons in the midbrain. Clozapine, an effective therapeutic for treatment-resistant schizophrenia, rescues the abnormal behavior of slc6a3−/− fish. Clozapine also reverses the abnormalities in the A8 region of the mutant midbrain. By RNA sequencing analysis, clozapine increases the expression of erythropoietin pathway genes. Transgenic over-expression of erythropoietin in neurons of slc6a3−/− fish partially rescues the mutant behavior, suggesting a potential mechanistic basis for clozapine's efficacy. : Biological Sciences; Ethology; Behavioral Neuroscience Subject Areas: Biological Sciences, Ethology, Behavioral Neuroscience