Chronic ciguatoxin poisoning causes emotional and cognitive dysfunctions in rats

Jun Wang, Bing Cao, Xiangwei Yang, Jiajun Wu, Leo Lai Chan, Ying Li*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Ciguatoxins are marine biotoxins that induce the human poisoning syndrome known as ciguatera fish poisoning (CFP). In humans, different kinds of neurological symptoms have been reported after CFP, including anxiety, depression and memory loss. Repetitive exposures to sub-threshold levels of ciguatera toxins may cause irreversible sub-clinical damage, and eventually cause more severe illness. Our previous study has shown that an acute single dose of Pacific ciguatoxin-1 (P-CTX-1) induced synaptic facilitation and blockage of the induction of electrical stimulation-induced long-term potentiation in the medial thalamus-anterior cingulate cortex pathway. Reactive astrogliosis was detected in acute ciguatera poisoning. Despite the reports of complex and prolonged neurological symptoms in patients, few studies have been conducted in animal models to investigate the emotional and cognitive deficits after chronic exposure to ciguatoxin. In the present study, using a rat model with repeated exposures to low dosage of P-CTX-1, we observed development of anxiety-like behavior by open field test and elevated plus maze test, and learning and memory deficits by the Morris water maze; further, decision-making impairment was determined in the chronic P-CTX-1-treated rats by the rats gambling task. We conclude that chronic ciguatera poisoning leads to anxiety, and to impairment of spatial reference memory and decision-making behavior.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)179-187
JournalToxicology Research
Volume6
Issue number2
Online published17 Jun 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2017

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