Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Dec 2023)

A comprehensive painkillers screening by assessing zebrafish behaviors after caudal fin amputation

  • Gilbert Audira,
  • Jong-Chin Huang,
  • Kelvin H.-C. Chen,
  • Kevin Adi Kurnia,
  • Ross D. Vasquez,
  • Marri Jmelou M. Roldan,
  • Yu-Heng Lai,
  • Chung-Der Hsiao,
  • Cheng-Yo Yen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 168
p. 115641

Abstract

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Recently, the usage of zebrafish for pain studies has increased in the past years, especially due to its robust pain-stimulated behaviors. Fin amputation has been demonstrated to induce a noxious response in zebrafish. However, based on the prior study, although lidocaine, the most used painkiller in zebrafish, has been shown to ameliorate amputated zebrafish behaviors, it still causes some prolonged effects. Therefore, alternative painkillers are always needed to improve the treatment quality of fin-amputated zebrafish. Here, the effects of several analgesics in recovering zebrafish behaviors post-fin amputation were evaluated. From the results, five painkillers were found to have potentially beneficial effects on amputated fish behaviors. Overall, these results aligned with their binding energy level to target proteins of COX-1 and COX-2. Later, based on their sub-chronic effects on zebrafish survivability, indomethacin, and diclofenac were further studied. This combination showed a prominent effect in recovering zebrafish behaviors when administered orally or through waterborne exposure, even with lower concentrations. Next, based on the ELISA in zebrafish brain tissue, although some changes were found in the treated group, no statistical differences were observed in most of the tested biomarkers. However, since heatmap clustering showed a similar pattern between biochemical and behavior endpoints, the minor changes in each biomarker may be sufficient in changing the fish behaviors.

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