Assessment of Developmental Delay in the Zebrafish embryo Teratogenicity Assay

Publication date

2020-06-12T07:18:48Z

2020-06-12T07:18:48Z

2013-02-27

2020-06-12T07:18:48Z

Abstract

In this study we analyzed some aspects of the assessment of developmental delay in the zebrafish embryotoxicity/teratogenicity test and explored the suitability of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity as a biochemical marker and as a higher throughput alternative to morphological endpoints such as head-trunk angle, tail length and morphological score. Embryos were exposed from 4 to 52 h post-fertilization (hpf) to a selection of known embryotoxic/teratogen compounds (valproic acid, retinoic acid, caffeine, sodium salicylate, glucose, hydroxyurea, methoxyacetic acid, boric acid and paraoxon-methyl) over a concentration range. They were evaluated for AChE activity, head-trunk angle, tail length and several qualitative parameters integrated in a morphological score. In general, the different patterns of the concentration-response curves allowed distinguishing between chemicals that produced growth retardation (valproic and methoxyacetic acid) and chemicals that produced non-growth-delay related malformations. An acceptable correlation between the morphological score, AChE activity and head-trunk angle as markers of developmental delay was observed, being AChE activity particularly sensitive to detect delay in the absence of malformations.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tiv.2012.07.010

Toxicology in Vitro, 2013, vol. 27, num. 1, p. 469-478

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tiv.2012.07.010

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(c) Elsevier Ltd, 2013

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