Acetic acid-induced nociception modulates sociability in adult zebrafish: Influence on shoaling behavior in heterogeneous groups and social preference.

Behav Brain Res

Laboratory of Experimental Neuropsychobiology, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Natural and Exact Sciences Center, Federal University of Santa Maria, 1000 Roraima Avenue, Santa Maria, RS 97105-900, Brazil; Graduate Program in Biological Sciences: Toxicological Biochemistry, Federal University of Santa Maria, 1000 Roraima Avenue, Santa Maria, RS 97105-900, Brazil; The International Zebrafish Neuroscience Research Consortium (ZNRC), 309 Palmer Court, Slidell, LA 70458, USA. Electronic address:

Published: September 2022

Due to the recognition of fishes as sentient beings, the zebrafish (Danio rerio) has become an emergent animal model system to investigate the biological processes of nocifensive responses. Here, we aimed to characterize the zebrafish social behavior in a nociception-based context. For this purpose, using a three-dimensional analysis of heterogeneous shoals, we investigated the main behavioral responses in two 6-min trials: before (baseline) and after a single intraperitoneal (i.p) injection of 10 μL phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (control), acetic acid 5% (AA), morphine 2.5 mg/kg (MOR) or acetic acid 5% plus morphine 2.5 mg/kg (AA + MOR) in one subject from a four-fish shoal. The social preference of individuals for tanks with shoals of fish treated with PBS, 5 % AA, or to an empty aquarium was also tested. We verified that AA administration disrupted the shoal homogeneity by eliciting dispersion of the treated fish with simultaneous clustering of non-manipulated fish. In general, morphine coadministration protected against AA-induced behavioral changes. The social preference test revealed a clear preference to conspecifics (PBS and AA) over an empty tank. However, a prominent preference for PBS- over AA-treated shoal was verified. Overall, our novel findings show that nociception can modulate zebrafish sociability, possibly due to the visual recognition of nocifensive responses. Although future studies are needed to elucidate how nociception modulates zebrafish social behavior, our results contribute to improve the welfare assessment of zebrafish shoals under distinct experimental manipulations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2022.114029DOI Listing

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