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- Title
Fish to learn: insights into the effects of environmental chemicals on eye development and visual function in zebrafish.
- Authors
Huang, Wenlong; Wu, Tianjie; Wu, Ruotong; Peng, Jiajun; Zhang, Qiong; Shi, Xiaoling; Wu, Kusheng
- Abstract
Vision is the most essential sense system for the human being. Congenital visual impairment affects millions of people globally. It is increasingly realized that visual system development is an impressionable target of environmental chemicals. However, due to inaccessibility and ethical issues, the use of humans and other placental mammals is constrained, which limits our better understanding of environmental factors on ocular development and visual function in the embryonic stage. Therefore, as complementing laboratory rodents, zebrafish has been the most frequently employed to understand the effects of environmental chemicals on eye development and visual function. One of the major reasons for the increasing use of zebrafish is their polychromatic vision. Zebrafish retinas are morphologically and functionally analogous to those of mammalian, as well as evolutionary conservation among vertebrate eye. This review provides an update on harmful effects from exposure to environmental chemicals, involving metallic elements (ions), metal-derived nanoparticles, microplastics, nanoplastics, persistent organic pollutants, pesticides, and pharmaceutical pollutants on the eye development and visual function in zebrafish embryos. The collected data provide a comprehensive understanding of environmental factors on ocular development and visual function. This report highlights that zebrafish is promising as a model to identify hazardous toxicants toward eye development and is hopeful for developing preventative or postnatal therapies for human congenital visual impairment.
- Subjects
BRACHYDANIO; VISION; MELANOPSIN; PERSISTENT pollutants; PLASTIC marine debris; METALS; VISION disorders; LABORATORY rodents
- Publication
Environmental Science & Pollution Research, 2023, Vol 30, Issue 29, p73018
- ISSN
0944-1344
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s11356-023-27629-3