Advancing understanding of anaesthesia and analgesia in the zebrafish

Award Number
BB/V000411/1
Status / Stage
Active
Dates
1 September 2021 -
31 August 2024
Duration (calculated)
02 years 11 months
Funder(s)
BBSRC (UKRI)
Funding Amount
£576,085.00
Funder/Grant study page
BBSRC UKRI
Contracted Centre
University of Exeter
Principal Investigator
Professor Charles Tyler
PI Contact
C.R.Tyler@exeter.ac.uk
WHO Catergories
Understanding Underlying Disease
Disease Type
Dementia (Unspecified)

CPEC Review Info
Reference ID729
ResearcherReside Team
Published07/07/2023

Data

Award NumberBB/V000411/1
Status / StageActive
Start Date20210901
End Date20240831
Duration (calculated) 02 years 11 months
Funder/Grant study pageBBSRC UKRI
Contracted CentreUniversity of Exeter
Funding Amount£576,085.00

Abstract

Each year millions of embryonic and larval (embryo-larval) zebrafish are used globally in laboratories, many of which undergo anaesthesia. Despite this, little information is available to guide anaesthetic or analgesic choices for fish, with even less data available for embryo-larvae. This knowledge gap is extensive, spanning an absence of basic information on appropriate dosing concentrations, to a lack of knowledge of the central circuitry involved in sedation or nociception. This project will fill these knowledge gaps via 3 main aims. Aim 1 will establish the efficacy of several anaesthetics/analgesics using functional brain imaging and electrophysiology. For the functional imaging we have developed a technique using zebrafish with pan-neuronally-expressed GCaMP6s that allows us to quantify brain-region specific responses to stimulation under conditions of anaesthesia and analgesia. Concentrations required to induce euthanasia will be confirmed using electrophysiology. Aim 2 will determine which agents inhibit neuromuscular activity, are aversive, or reduce avoidance of noxious stimuli using automated behavioural assessment. This includes quantifying the avoidance of each agent using a tank arena place preference assay for aversion, and the effect of analgesics on the amelioration of noxious simulation for nociception. Aim 3 is focussed on understanding mechanisms of action and central sedative and nociceptive processing in fish. For this we will undertake functional imaging in circuit-specific transgenic reporter lines and supplement this with immunohistochemistry to identify specific circuits responding to treatment with these agents. The same approach will be used following noxious stimulation in order to define the central circuitry involved in nociception, which is largely unknown in fish. This project will provide data to refine millions of animal experiments, and generate important mechanistic information on anaesthetic and analgesic action in fish.

Aims

Aim 1 will establish the efficacy of several anaesthetics/analgesics using functional brain imaging and electrophysiology. Aim 2 will determine which agents inhibit neuromuscular activity, are aversive, or reduce avoidance of noxious stimuli using automated behavioural assessment. Aim 3 is focussed on understanding mechanisms of action and central sedative and nociceptive processing in fish.