Title: Models: NonMammalian
1Models Non-Mammalian
- Pamela J. Lein, Ph.D.
- Center for Research on Occupational and
Environmental Toxicology - Oregon Health Sciences University
2Collins et al., 2008, Science 319906-907.
3Why consider non-mammalian models for DNT?
- A major challenge with in vitro models for DNT is
that in the developing nervous system the whole
is greater than the sum of its parts - Reducing developing nervous system to subsets of
cell or slices of specific brain regions
increases chance of missing critical differences
and significant interactions between - cell types
- brain regions
- organ systems
- developmental stages
4Scientific justification for considering
non-mammalian models for DNT
- The fish is a frogis a chickenis a mouse
Charles Kimmel (1989)
Trends Genet 5 283-288 - Fundamental mechanisms of neurodevelopment are
remarkably conserved across species - Simple organisms exhibit the same
neurodevelopmental - processes as humans
-
- Genes homologous to human genes implicated in
- neurodevelopment and neurodevelopmental
diseases - have been identified in simple organisms
5Logistic advantages of non-mammalian models
relative to mammalian models
- Small size, rapid embryonic development, and
short life cycle - Decreases costs
- Increases throughput
- Relative ease of transgenesis
- Facilitates mechanistic studies
- Provides powerful tools for optimizing model for
DNT (increasing resolution, humanizing model)
6Non-mammalian models used widely to study
mechanisms of neurodevelopment
Nematodes (Caenorhabditis elegans) Sea
urchin Insects (Drosophila melanogaster) Fish
(Danio rerio) Amphibian (frog) Birds (chick
embyro) Mammals (mice, rats, non-human primates)
increasing complexity
Entire genomic sequence is known
7What kinds of endpoints can be assessed in
non-mammalian models?
- Gene expression
- Toxicity pathways
- Neurodevelopmental processes
- Behavior
- Multiple endpoints can be measured, across
several organ systems (dev tox)
8Neurodevelopmental processes that occur in
nematodes, flies, zebrafish
No myelination in nematode and fly
Schematic courtesy of Bill Mundy, U.S.E.P.A.
9C. elegans as a model for DNT
- Simple nervous system
- 302 neurons
- Cell fate and neural circuits completely mapped
10Behavioral analyses of C. elegans
- Mechanosensory behavior
- Reproductive behavior
- Learning, adaptation and habituation
A. Sinusoidal forward locomotion B. Omega turn in
navigation C. Egg laying D. Solitary feeding
behavior E. Social feeding behavior Schafer,
2005, Current Biology 15R723-R729.
11DNT studies in C. elegansCole et al., 2004,
TAAP, 194248-256.
EC50 values in C. elegans determined using
computerized tracking of locomotion.
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13Drosophila as a model for DNT
- Powerful tool for elucidating molecular
mechanisms of neurodevelopment - Easy to manipulate gene expression
- Being developed as a model for examining genes
that contribute to the pathogenesis of
neurological diseases (e.g., autism) - Exhibit relatively complex behaviors
14Drosophila courtship a social interaction
modified by experience
A. Orienting
B. Tapping
C. Singing
partner selection communication
cooperation behavioral sequence
single-gene effects courtship
conditioning
D. Licking E. Attempted F.
Copulation Copulation
What is it about no you dont understand?
15DNT studies in Drosophila
?
- Few articles in the peer-reviewed literature
- Primarily mechanistic studies
- Heavy metals
- Organophosphorus anticholinesterases
16Zebrafish (Danio rerio) as DNT Model
- Key biological traits more similar to human than
nematodes or flies and thus may make the
zebrafish more immediately useful for DNT - mechanisms of gene regulation differ
significantly between invertebrates and
vertebrates - overall organization of the major components of
the fish brain is highly homologous to the human
brain - zebrafish possesses all the classical sense
modalities (vision, olfaction, taste, touch,
balance, and hearing) and their sensory pathways
share overall homology with humans. - lesions of the structural homolog of the
hippocampus in fish selectively impair spatial
memory
17Major logistic advantage of zebrafish relative to
nematodes and flies
- Zebrafish embryos, which develop externally, are
optically transparent
18Imaging of neurodevelopment in zebrafish
- possible to resolve individual cells in vivo
- across a broad range of developmental stages
- potential to use non-invasive methods to
- monitor neurodevelopment at different time
- points in the same animal
-
- Show movies
19Behavioral analyses in zebrafish
adapted from Elwood Linney, Duke University
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21Strategy for evaluating effects of early
exposures on adult behavioradapted from Elwood
Linney, Duke University
22DNT studies in zebrafish
- Hill et al., 2005, Tox Sci 86 6-19
- Metals, PCBs/PAHs, retinoic acid, cyclopamine
(hedgehog signaling), fragrances, nitrated
benzenes, pesticides and herbicides, estrogenic
compounds, nicotine, ethanol, others - Ton et al., 2006, Birth Defects Res 76 553-567
23Challenges of adapting non-mammalian models for
DNT
- Technical challenges
- imaging (non-invasive, automation/high
throughput) - Toxicokinetics
- administration of chemicals
- determining dose
- metabolism
- Predictability
- is the response observed in non-mammalian models
predictive of neurotoxic responses in the
developing human nervous system?