Abstract

Pain is an unpleasant, negative emotion and its debilitating effects are complex to manage. Mammalian models have long dominated research on nociception and pain, but there is increasing evidence for comparable processes in fish. The need to improve existing pain models for drug research and the obligation for 3R refinement of fish procedures facilitated the development of numerous new assays of nociception and pain in fish. The zebrafish is already a well-established animal model in many other research areas like toxicity testing, as model for diseases or regeneration and has great potential in pain research, too. Methods of electrophysiology, molecular biology, analysis of reflexive or non-reflexive behavior and fluorescent imaging are routinely applied but it is the combination of these tools what makes the zebrafish model so powerful. Simultaneously, observing complex behavior in free-swimming larvae, as well as their neuronal activity at the cellular level, opens new avenues for pain research. This review aims to supply a toolbox for researchers by summarizing current methods to study nociception and pain in zebrafish. We identify treatments with the best algogenic potential, be it chemical, thermal or electric stimuli and discuss options of analgesia to counter effects of nociception and pain by opioids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or local anesthetics. In addition, we critically evaluate these practices, identify gaps of knowledge and outline potential future developments.

Highlights

  • Current Methods to Investigate Nociception and Pain in ZebrafishThe need to improve existing pain models for drug research and the obligation for 3R refinement of fish procedures facilitated the development of numerous new assays of nociception and pain in fish

  • Pain in fish poses an underappreciated ethical and technical concern in animal experiments (Carbone, 2011; Gaskin and Richard, 2012; Sloman et al, 2019) but it offers new possibilities for insights and discoveries in pain and drug research

  • While still under discussion if the fish brain is sufficiently evolved to encode the perception of pain, an increasing number of methods allow at least investigation of the detrimental effects of noxious stimuli

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Summary

Current Methods to Investigate Nociception and Pain in Zebrafish

The need to improve existing pain models for drug research and the obligation for 3R refinement of fish procedures facilitated the development of numerous new assays of nociception and pain in fish. Molecular biology, analysis of reflexive or non-reflexive behavior and fluorescent imaging are routinely applied but it is the combination of these tools what makes the zebrafish model so powerful. Observing complex behavior in free-swimming larvae, as well as their neuronal activity at the cellular level, opens new avenues for pain research. This review aims to supply a toolbox for researchers by summarizing current methods to study nociception and pain in zebrafish. We identify treatments with the best algogenic potential, be it chemical, thermal or electric stimuli and discuss options of analgesia to counter effects of nociception and pain by opioids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or local anesthetics.

INTRODUCTION
Nociception and Pain in Zebrafish
Stimuli and Modalities
Formalin NaCl Optovin
Models of Ongoing Pain
INVESTIGATING MECHANISMS OF NOCICEPTION AND PAIN
Molecular Markers and Signaling
Nocifensive Behavior
Buprenorphine Lidocaine
Acetylsalicylic acid Diclofenac Indomethacin
CONCLUSION AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Full Text
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