Light/Dark Preference Test in Zebrafish
Scientific Overview
The Light/Dark Test measures anxiety-related scototaxis (dark preference) in zebrafish. It is conceptually derived from rodent light–dark box paradigms and quantifies risk assessment versus exploratory drive.
1. Historical Background
Adaptation to zebrafish:
- Maximino et al., 2010. Behavioural Brain Research
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.12.031 - Serra et al., 1999 (teleost scototaxis model)
2. Neurobiological Basis
- Serotonergic pathways
- Cortisol regulation
- Visual system processing
- Amygdala-like pallial circuits
3. Scientific Objectives
Measure:
- Time spent in dark vs light compartment
- Latency to first transition
- Number of crossings
- Risk assessment behavior
4. Standardized Methodology
Apparatus
- Two-compartment tank (equal size)
- One opaque black side
- One transparent/light side
- Illumination: 300 lux on light side
Procedure
- 5–10 minute recording
- Free access between compartments
Parameters
- % time in dark
- Transition frequency
- Distance traveled
- Freezing episodes
Pharmacological Controls
- Diazepam → reduced dark preference
- Yohimbine → increased dark preference
5. Statistical Analysis
- Paired comparisons
- Two-way ANOVA
- Preference index calculation
6. Applications
- Anxiety pharmacology
- Endocrine disruptors
- Heavy metal exposure
- Stress research
7. Limitations
- Light intensity variability
- Visual acuity differences
- Pigmentation bias
8. OECD Context
Behavioral endpoint potentially relevant to:
- OECD TG 236
- OECD TG 210
Currently not standardized for regulatory decision-making.
9. Key References
- Maximino et al., 2010. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.12.031
- Blaser & Gerlai, 2006. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2006.02.005