The crayfish model (Orconectes rusticus), epigenetics and drug addiction research

Publication date: Available online 14 June 2019Source: Pharmacology Biochemistry and BehaviorAuthor(s): Adebobola Imeh-Nathaniel, Vasiliki Orfanakos, Leah Wormack, Robert Huber, Thomas I. NathanielAbstractFundamental signs of epigenetic effects are variations in the expression of genes or phenotypic traits among isogenic mates. Therefore, genetically identical animals are in high demand for epigenetic research. There are many genetically identical animals, including natural parthenogens and inbred laboratory lineages or clones. However, most parthenogenetic animal taxa are very small in combined epigenetic and drug addiction research. Orconectes rusticus has a unique phylogenetic position, with 2–3 years of life span, which undergoes metamorphosis that creates developmental stages with distinctly different morphologies, unique lifestyles, and broad behavioral traits, even among isogenic mates reared in the same environment offer novel inroads for epigenetics studies. Moreover, the establishment of crayfish as a novel system for drug addiction with evidence of an automated, operant self-administration and conditioned-reward, withdrawal, reinstatement of the conditioned drug-induced reward sets the stage to investigate epigenetic mechanisms of drug addiction. We discuss behavioral, pharmacological and molecular findings from laboratory studies that document a broad spectrum of molecular and, behavioral evidence including potential hypotheses that can be tested with the cray...
Source: Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior - Category: Biochemistry Source Type: research