PUBLICATION

Unique and potent effects of acute ibogaine on zebrafish: The developing utility of novel aquatic models for hallucinogenic drug research

Authors
Cachat, J., Kyzar, E.J., Collins, C., Gaikwad, S., Green, J., Roth, A., El-Ounsi, M., Davis, A., Pham, M., Landsman, S., Stewart, A.M., and Kalueff, A.V.
ID
ZDB-PUB-120928-1
Date
2013
Source
Behavioural brain research   236C: 258-269 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Cachat, Jonathan, Kalueff, Allan V.
Keywords
ibogaine, hallucinogenic drugs, zebrafish, novel tank test, 3D reconstructions of locomotion
MeSH Terms
  • Aggression/drug effects
  • Aggression/psychology
  • Animals
  • Anxiety/chemically induced
  • Anxiety/psychology
  • Behavior, Animal/drug effects*
  • Biomarkers
  • Color
  • Darkness
  • Female
  • Gene Expression/drug effects
  • Genes, fos/drug effects
  • Hallucinogens/pharmacology*
  • Hydrocortisone/metabolism
  • Ibogaine/pharmacology*
  • Male
  • Models, Animal
  • Motor Activity/drug effects
  • Social Behavior
  • Swimming
  • Video Recording
  • Zebrafish/physiology*
PubMed
22974549 Full text @ Behav. Brain Res.
Abstract

An indole alkaloid, ibogaine is the principal psychoactive component of the iboga plant, used by indigenous peoples in West Africa for centuries. Modulating multiple neurotransmitter systems, the drug is a potent hallucinogen in humans, although its psychotropic effects remain poorly understood. Expanding the range of model species is an important strategy for translational neuroscience research. Here we exposed adult zebrafish (Danio rerio) to 10 and 20 mg/L of ibogaine, testing them in the novel tank, light–dark box, open field, mirror stimulation, social preference and shoaling tests. In the novel tank test, the zebrafish natural diving response (geotaxis) was reversed by ibogaine, inducing initial top swimming followed by bottom dwelling. Ibogaine also attenuated the innate preference for dark environments (scototaxis) in the light–dark box test. While it did not exert overt locomotor or thigmotaxic responses in the open field test, the drug altered spatiotemporal exploration of novel environment, inducing clear preference of some areas over others. Ibogaine also promoted ‘mirror’ exploration in the mirror stimulation test, disrupted group cohesion in the shoaling test, and evoked strong coloration responses due to melanophore aggregation, but did not alter brain c-fos expression or whole-body cortisol levels. Overall, our results support the complex pharmacological profile of ibogaine and its high sensitivity in zebrafish models, dose-dependently affecting multiple behavioral domains. While future investigations in zebrafish may help elucidate the mechanisms underlying these unique behavioral effects, our study strongly supports the developing utility of aquatic models in hallucinogenic drug research. High sensitivity of three-dimensional phenotyping approaches applied here to behavioral effects of ibogaine in zebrafish provides further evidence of how 3D reconstructions of zebrafish swimming paths may be useful for high-throughput pharmacological screening.

Genes / Markers
Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping