Affiliations 

  • 1 Center for Environmental Biology and Ecosystem Studies, National Institute for Environmental Studies Tsukuba, Japan
  • 2 Center for Environmental Health Sciences, National Institute for Environmental StudiesTsukuba, Japan; Department of Clinical Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Beni-Suef UniversityBeni-Suef, Egypt
  • 3 Center for Environmental Biology and Ecosystem Studies, National Institute for Environmental StudiesTsukuba, Japan; Laboratory of Integrative Brain Sciences, Department of Biology and Center for Medical Life Science, Waseda UniversityTokyo, Japan
  • 4 Laboratory of Integrative Brain Sciences, Department of Biology and Center for Medical Life Science, Waseda UniversityTokyo, Japan; Jeffrey Cheah School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Brain Research Institute Monash Sunway, Monash University MalaysiaBandar Sunway, Malaysia
  • 5 Laboratory of Integrative Brain Sciences, Department of Biology and Center for Medical Life Science, Waseda University Tokyo, Japan
Front Neurosci, 2016;10:296.
PMID: 27445667 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2016.00296

Abstract

Most of the currently used toxicity assays for environmental chemicals use acute or chronic systemic or reproductive toxicity endpoints rather than neurobehavioral endpoints. In addition, the current standard approaches to assess reproductive toxicity are time-consuming. Therefore, with increasing numbers of chemicals being developed with potentially harmful neurobehavioral effects in higher vertebrates, including humans, more efficient means of assessing neuro- and reproductive toxicity are required. Here we discuss the use of a Galliformes-based avian test battery in which developmental toxicity is assessed by means of a combination of chemical exposure during early embryonic development using an embryo culture system followed by analyses after hatching of sociosexual behaviors such as aggression and mating and of visual memory via filial imprinting. This Galliformes-based avian test battery shows promise as a sophisticated means not only of assessing chemical toxicity in avian species but also of assessing the risks posed to higher vertebrates, including humans, which are markedly sensitive to nervous or neuroendocrine system dysfunction.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.