iScience (Jul 2023)

Behavioral analysis through the lifespan of disc1 mutant zebrafish identifies defects in sensorimotor transformation

  • Brock R. Pluimer,
  • Devin L. Harrison,
  • Chanon Boonyavairoje,
  • Eric P. Prinssen,
  • Mark Rogers-Evans,
  • Randall T. Peterson,
  • Summer B. Thyme,
  • Anjali K. Nath

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 7
p. 107099

Abstract

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Summary: DISC1 is a genetic risk factor for multiple psychiatric disorders. Compared to the dozens of murine Disc1 models, there is a paucity of zebrafish disc1 models—an organism amenable to high-throughput experimentation. We conducted the longitudinal neurobehavioral analysis of disc1 mutant zebrafish across key stages of life. During early developmental stages, disc1 mutants exhibited abrogated behavioral responses to sensory stimuli across multiple testing platforms. Moreover, during exposure to an acoustic sensory stimulus, loss of disc1 resulted in the abnormal activation of neurons in the pallium, cerebellum, and tectum—anatomical sites involved in the integration of sensory perception and motor control. In adulthood, disc1 mutants exhibited sexually dimorphic reduction in anxiogenic behavior in novel paradigms. Together, these findings implicate disc1 in sensorimotor processes and the genesis of anxiogenic behaviors, which could be exploited for the development of novel treatments in addition to investigating the biology of sensorimotor transformation in the context of disc1 deletion.

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