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The Effects of
Ethanol on Zebrafish Development
Jeff Mindel,
Developmental Biology, Franklin and Marshall College,
Lancaster, PA.
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Introduction:
The
early stages of zebrafish, Danio rerio development
are characterized by meroblastic dicoidal cleavage.
Initially cell division only occurs in the blastodisc, which
is a thin region on the animal cap of the egg. This
blasotdisc contains all of the egg's cytoplasm and
organelles, the rest of the egg is filled with yolk. After
about 10 cell divisions the midblastula transition begins
and the cells differentiate into three groups. The yolk
syncytial layer (YSL) is made up of the cells on the vegital
end of the blastula which fuse with the yolk. The second
population of cells is the enveloping layer cells (EVL)
which are positioned on the outer edges of the embryo. The
deep layer cells make up the third popultaion and are the
cells that actually give rise to the embryo itself. During
gastrulation the YSL cells migrate down the edges of the
embryo towards the vegital pole in a process called ebiboly
that envelops the yolk. At the edge of this migration the
deep cells involute/ingress under themselves and form the
mesodermal layer. Of these new mesoderm cells, some of the
ones that migrate anteriorly become the prechordal plate
mesoderm.
When zebrafish are treated with ethanol during early
gastrula stages a condition known as cyclopia can be induced
(Blader and Strähle, 1998). This is a condition in
which there is one narrow eye slit and usually there are no
eyes at all. It is believed that exposure to ethanol causes
the prechordal plate mesoderm to migrate abnormally (Blader
and Strähle, 1998). This abnormal migration causes the
prechordal plate mesoderm cells to end up in an incorrect
location, and it is this that is believed to cause cyclopia.
The prechordal cells express the genes goosecoid and
islet-1 which code for proteins that help control
cell differentiation in the anterior region of the embryo,
and their release in the incorrect location is the cause of
deformations (Blader and Strähle, 1998). Lack of sonic
hedgehog expression is also known to cause cyclopia in mice
and chicks, and ethanol may act to disrupt its expression
too (Gilbert, 2000).
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