使用视运动反应的变体作为斑马鱼的视觉缺陷检测试验。

Journal of biological methods Pub Date : 2021-02-01 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.14440/jbm.2021.341
Matthew K LeFauve, Cassie J Rowe, Mikayla Crowley-Perry, Jenna L Wiegand, Arthur G Shapiro, Victoria P Connaughton
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引用次数: 9

摘要

我们描述了一种视觉刺激,可用于幼虫和成年斑马鱼(Danio rerio)。该方案是对标准视觉行为分析,即视动反应(OMR)的改进。OMR常用于确定空间反应或检测定向视觉运动缺陷。可以使用高对比度的栅格模式生成OMR,通常是竖条。空间灵敏度是通过检测和对光栅宽度变化的响应来测量的,并以每度周期(CPD)报告。该测试已广泛用于斑马鱼幼虫和成鱼,以识别视觉和/或基于运动的突变。从历史上看,当对成人进行测试时,栅格图案是从垂直角度呈现的,使用一个旋转的圆柱体围绕着一个容器,允许栅格仅从生物体的侧面和正面看到。相比之下,斑马鱼幼虫的omr是通过投射在鱼下方的刺激引起的。这种方法上的差异意味着需要两种不同的实验装置:一种用于成虫,另一种用于幼虫。我们的视觉刺激改变了刺激的形式,使一个单一的OMR刺激,适用于成年和幼鱼,被呈现在鱼的下面。使用这种方法分析视觉运动反应不需要昂贵的行为跟踪软件,并且使用单一的行为范式,允许观察者快速确定斑马鱼幼虫和成鱼的视觉空间反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Using a variant of the optomotor response as a visual defect detection assay in zebrafish.

We describe a visual stimulus that can be used with both larval and adult zebrafish (Danio rerio). This protocol is a modification of a standard visual behavior analysis, the optomotor response (OMR). The OMR is often used to determine the spatial response or to detect directional visuomotor deficiencies. An OMR can be generated using a high contrast grated pattern, typically vertical bars. The spatial sensitivity is measured by detection and response to a change in grating bar width and is reported in cycles per degree (CPD). This test has been used extensively with zebrafish larvae and adults to identify visual- and/or motor-based mutations. Historically, when tested in adults, the grated pattern was presented from a vertical perspective, using a rotating cylinder around a holding tank, allowing the grating to be seen solely from the sides and front of the organism. In contrast, OMRs in zebrafish larvae are elicited using a stimulus projected below the fish. This difference in methodology means that two different experimental set-ups are required: one for adults and one for larvae. Our visual stimulus modifies the stimulation format so that a single OMR stimulus, suitable for use with both adults and larvae, is being presented underneath the fish. Analysis of visuomotor responses using this method does not require costly behavioral tracking software and, using a single behavioral paradigm, allows the observer to rapidly determine visual spatial response in both zebrafish larvae and adults.

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