PUBLICATION

The importance of individual variation for the interpretation of behavioural studies: ethanol effects vary with basal activity level in zebrafish larvae

Authors
Davis, R., Luchtenburg, F., Richardson, M., Schaaf, M., Tudorache, C., Slabbekoorn, H.
ID
ZDB-PUB-210914-7
Date
2021
Source
Psychopharmacology   238(11): 3155-3166 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Luchtenburg, Floris, Schaaf, Marcel J. M.
Keywords
Behaviour, Coping style, Ethanol, Juvenile zebrafish, Personality
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Behavior, Animal
  • Ethanol/pharmacology
  • Humans
  • Larva
  • Locomotion
  • Pharmaceutical Preparations*
  • Zebrafish*
PubMed
34510233 Full text @ Psychpharma
Abstract
Standardization and reduction of variation is key to behavioural screening of animal models in toxicological and pharmacological studies. However, individual variation in behavioural and physiological phenotypes remains in each laboratory population and can undermine the understanding of toxicological and pharmaceutical effects and their underlying mechanisms. Here, we used zebrafish (ABTL-strain) larvae to explore individual consistency in activity level and emergence time, across subsequent days of early development (6-8 dpf). We also explored the correlation between these two behavioural parameters. We found inter-individual consistency over time in activity level and emergence time, but we did not find a consistent correlation between these parameters. Subsequently, we investigated the impact of variation in activity level on the effect of a 1% ethanol treatment, suitable for our proof-of-concept case study about whether impact from pharmacological treatments might be affected by inter-individual variation in basal locomotion. The inter-individual consistency over time in activity level did not persist in this test. This was due to the velocity change from before to after exposure, which turned out to be a dynamic individual trait related to basal activity level: low-activity individuals raised their swimming velocity, while high-activity individuals slowed down, yielding diametrically opposite response patterns to ethanol exposure. We therefore argue that inter-individual consistency in basal activity level, already from 6 dpf, is an important factor to take into account and provides a practical measure to improve the power of statistical analyses and the scope for data interpretation from behavioural screening studies.
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