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The Neurobehavioral and Developmental Effects of Flame Retardants on Zebrafish
Abstract
Flame retardants are added to a large range of consumer products—including textiles,
furniture, electronics and building materials—for the purpose of preventing or slowing
the the spreading of fires. Human exposure to flame retardants has been shown to occur
through both ingestion of indoor air and absorption of dust particles through the
skin. In recent years, concern pertaining to the health and environmental implications
of certain categories of flame retardants has led to the phasing out of these chemicals
and replacement with alternatives, such as organophosphate (OP) flame retardants.
Thus, the present study investigates whether developmental exposure to low levels
of these chemicals will result in measurable behavioral effects at early or later
life stages. Zebrafish eggs are exposed to flame retardant chemicals, an OP pesticide
of known neurotoxicity, or a vehicle control consisting of 0.01% solution of dimethyl
sulfide oxide (DMSO) for 5 days post-fertilization. After exposure, larvae swim behavior
is tested. The 6-day old larvae are then transferred to aquarium water and allowed
to develop normally. The adult zebrafish are tested on a battery of assessments examining
anxiety-related behavior, sensorimotor integration, predatory escape, sociability,
and cognitive ability. The ultimate aim is to evaluate the safety profiles of these
compounds and determine whether zebrafish high throughput behavioral assays are an
effective model for characterizing neurotoxicity.
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
PsychiatryPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14298Citation
Drastal, Meghan; & Glazer, Dr Lilah (2017). The Neurobehavioral and Developmental Effects of Flame Retardants on Zebrafish. Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14298.Collections
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