Behavioral effects of MDMA (‘ecstasy’) on adult zebrafish

Adam Stewart(Tulane University), Russell Riehl(Tulane University), Keith Wong(Tulane University), Jeremy Green(Tulane University), Jessica Cosgrove(Tulane University), Karoly Vollmer(Tulane University), Evan J. Kyzar(Tulane University), Peter C. Hart(Tulane University), Alexander V. Allain(Tulane University), Jonathan Cachat(Tulane University), Siddharth Gaikwad(Tulane University), Molly Hook(Tulane University), Kate Rhymes(Tulane University), Alan Newman(Tulane University), Eli Utterback(Tulane University), Katie Chang(Tulane University), Allan V. Kalueff(Tulane University)
Behavioural Pharmacology
April 8, 2011
Cited by 66

Abstract

3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, 'ecstasy') is a potent psychedelic drug inducing euphoria and hypersociability in humans, as well as hyperactivity and anxiety in rodents. Adult zebrafish (Danio rerio) have become a widely used species in neurobehavioral research. Here, we explore the effects of a wide range (0.25-120 mg/l) of acute MDMA doses on zebrafish behavior in the novel tank test. Although MDMA was inactive at lower doses (0.25-10 mg/l), higher doses reduced bottom swimming and immobility (40-120 mg/l) and impaired intrasession habituation (10-120 mg/l). MDMA also elevated brain c-fos expression, collectively confirming the usage of zebrafish models for screening of hallucinogenic compounds.


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