Abstract
Understanding the pathogenesis of the complex behavioural disorders that constitute psychiatric disease is a major challenge for biomedical research. Assays in rodents have contributed significantly to our understanding of the neural basis of behavioural disorders and continue to be one of the main focuses for the development of novel therapeutics. Now, owing to their genetic tractability and optical transparency (allowing in vivo imaging of circuit function) and the rapid expansion of genetic tools, zebrafish are becoming increasingly popular for behavioural genetic research. The increased development of behavioural assays in zebrafish raises the possibility of exploiting the advantages of this system to identify molecular mechanisms contributing to behavioural phenotypes associated with psychiatric disorders as well as potential therapeutics. This mini-review describes behavioural paradigms in zebrafish that can be used to address endophenotypes associated with psychiatric disease. The content reflects the interests of the author and covers tests of cognitive functions, response choice and inhibition, social interaction and executive function.
©2011 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
Articles in the same Issue
- Publisher's Note
- A new start for Reviews in the Neurosciences
- Guest Editorial
- A small fish with a big future: zebrafish in behavioral neuroscience
- Application of zebrafish oculomotor behavior to model human disorders
- Shoaling in zebrafish: what we don’t know
- Sleep and its regulation in zebrafish
- Zebrafish behavioural assays of translational relevance for the study of psychiatric disease
- Stressing zebrafish for behavioral genetics
- Imaging escape and avoidance behavior in zebrafish larvae
- Zebrafish assessment of cognitive improvement and anxiolysis: filling the gap between in vitro and rodent models for drug development
- Alcohol-induced behavior change in zebrafish models
- Zebrafish models to study drug abuse-related phenotypes
- The role of dopaminergic signalling during larval zebrafish brain development: a tool for investigating the developmental basis of neuropsychiatric disorders
- Let there be light: zebrafish neurobiology and the optogenetic revolution
Articles in the same Issue
- Publisher's Note
- A new start for Reviews in the Neurosciences
- Guest Editorial
- A small fish with a big future: zebrafish in behavioral neuroscience
- Application of zebrafish oculomotor behavior to model human disorders
- Shoaling in zebrafish: what we don’t know
- Sleep and its regulation in zebrafish
- Zebrafish behavioural assays of translational relevance for the study of psychiatric disease
- Stressing zebrafish for behavioral genetics
- Imaging escape and avoidance behavior in zebrafish larvae
- Zebrafish assessment of cognitive improvement and anxiolysis: filling the gap between in vitro and rodent models for drug development
- Alcohol-induced behavior change in zebrafish models
- Zebrafish models to study drug abuse-related phenotypes
- The role of dopaminergic signalling during larval zebrafish brain development: a tool for investigating the developmental basis of neuropsychiatric disorders
- Let there be light: zebrafish neurobiology and the optogenetic revolution