4.5 Article

Zebrafish as a Model for Toxicological Perturbation of Yolk and Nutrition in the Early Embryo

Journal

CURRENT ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH REPORTS
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages 125-133

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s40572-018-0183-2

Keywords

Yolk; Yolk sac; Embryonic nutrition; Developmental toxicology; Malabsorption

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01ES025748, R01ES028201, F32ES028085]

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Purpose of ReviewDevelopmental toxicity assessments often focus on structural outcomes and overlook subtle metabolic differences which occur during the early embryonic period. Deviant embryonic nutrition can result in later-life disease, including diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease. Prior to placenta-mediated nutrient exchange, the human embryo requires maternally supplied nutritional substrates for growth, called yolk. Here, we compare the biology of the human and zebrafish yolk and review examples of toxicant-mediated perturbation of yolk defects, composition, and utilization.Recent FindingsZebrafish embryos, like human embryos, have a protruding yolk sac that serves as a nutritional cache. Aberrant yolk morphology is a common qualitative finding in fish embryotoxicity studies, but quantitative assessment and characterization provides an opportunity to uncover mechanistic targets of toxicant effects on embryonic nutrition.SummaryThe zebrafish and the study of its yolk sac is an excellent model for uncovering toxicant disruptions to early embryonic nutrition and has potential to discover mechanistic insights into the developmental origins of health and disease.

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