Thigmotaxis (Edge Preference) Assay in Zebrafish
Scientific Overview
Thigmotaxis refers to the tendency of zebrafish (Danio rerio) to remain close to tank walls, reflecting anxiety-like behavior and risk avoidance.
It is often quantified in open-field aquatic paradigms.
1. Historical Background
Derived from rodent open field models.
Zebrafish validation:
- Blaser & Gerlai, 2006. Behavioural Brain Research
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2006.02.005 - Maximino et al., 2010.
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.12.031
2. Neurobiological Basis
- Serotonergic modulation
- Cortisol-mediated stress axis
- Amygdala-like circuits
- Dopaminergic regulation
3. Scientific Objectives
Measure:
- Time spent near walls
- Center entries
- Center latency
- Anxiety index
4. Standardized Experimental Methodology
Apparatus
- Square tank (20 × 20 cm)
- Virtual central vs peripheral zones
- 5–10 minute recording
Primary Endpoints
- % Time in periphery
- Distance traveled
- Freezing episodes
- Thigmotaxis index
Positive Controls
- Diazepam → reduced edge preference
- Caffeine → increased edge preference
5. Statistical Analysis
- Zone preference comparison
- Repeated-measures ANOVA
- Anxiety index calculation
6. Applications
- Anxiety pharmacology
- Stress exposure models
- Environmental toxin testing
- Cortisol modulation studies
7. Limitations
- Tank geometry effects
- Locomotor confounds
- Lighting influence
8. OECD Regulatory Context
Potential adjunct behavioral endpoint in:
- OECD TG 236
- Early Life Stage toxicity tests
Not yet validated for regulatory decision-making.
9. Key References
- Blaser & Gerlai, 2006. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2006.02.005
- Maximino et al., 2010. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.12.031