OSU Logo

Aquatic Biomedical Models

Robert L. Tanguay, Ph.D., Director

Phone: 541-737-6514
 robert.tanguay@oregonstate.edu

Learn more about the
Sinnhuber Aquatic Research Laboratory

zebrafish

SARL Microsporidia Free Zebrafish Order Form

The Aquatic Biomedical Models Facility Core is unique worldwide as a facility equipped to conduct biomedical research using zebrafish as aquatic research models. It primarily consists of a self-contained fish hatchery and histopathology complex for rearing fish and for conducting tumor and toxicity studies. For the carcinogenesis and toxicity studies, investigators can chose several exposure routes, such as water-bath exposure of embryos or fry, dietary exposure, or embryo injection.

The goal of this core is to facilitate the short- and long-term experiments of center investigators by:

  • Providing consultation regarding the feasibility of conducting biomedical studies in aquatic models;
  • Providing high quality zebrafish at multiple life stages;
  • Providing technical core support including tank allocations, diet preparation and feeding;
  • Providing assistance and in chemical exposure;
  • Providing specific expertise in surgery and necropsy; and histopathological evaluation; and
  • Work with the investigators in data acquisition and interpretation.

Facilities, Services and Equipment

 The current zebrafish facility is composed of approximately 400 research tanks capable of holding up to 4,000 adult zebrafish for short and long-term studies. A significant expansion project is underway in which tank capacity will increase 10-fold. One of the unique advantages of zebrafish is the availability of hundreds of mutant and transgenic zebrafish with unique properties suited for specific experiments. This core allows our investigators access to any of these animals by providing a mechanism for their incorporation and propagation in the core. Currently, several wild-type zebrafish strains are maintained in the facility. In addition, a number of transgenic reporter lines are maintained which express GFP in specific cells and organs. In addition we have assembled the tools necessary to provide investigators access to transgenic approaches in zebrafish. Transient over expression (DNA and RNA) and antisense (modified oligonucleotides, morpholinos) repression technique are now routine.
 

Services: Aquatic animal life stages (various developmental) of zebrafish and trout are available for research use. Per animal cost depends upon species and stage of development.
 SARL Microsporidia Free Zebrafish Order Form

Facility Calendars: Exposure Room | Spawn Dates

Staff

Eric Johnson, M.S., Fisheries/Marine Biologist
Facility Manager
Phone: 541-737-4389
Email: Eric.Johnson@oregonstate.edu
Fax: 541-737-6074
Eric is in charge of the day-to-day operations of the facility and offers expertise in fish husbandry, chemical exposures of fish via several routes of administration, computer support for facility operation and data retrieval, fish dissection, laboratory instrument operation and maintenance and other functions.

Greg Gonnerman, B.S., Fisheries Biologist
Assistant Facility Manager
Phone: 541-737-4393
Email: Gman@oregonstate.edu
Fax: 541-737-6074
Greg is responsible for diet preparation, feeding, spawning, egg, and fry care, maintenance of the laboratory, fish dissection and other necessary duties.
Cari Buchner, B.S., Fish Specialist
Phone: 541-737-4392
Email: Cari.Buchner2@oregonstate.edu
Fax: 541-737-6074
Cari works with rainbow trout, and her focus is the Toxic diet prep. The majority of her time is spent on feeding, husbandry, health monitoring, and when time allows, some facility maintenance projects.
 

Chapell Miller, Faculty Research Assistant
 Phone: 541-737-4391
Email: Chapell.Miller@oregonstate.edu
Chapell's focus is on High Throughput Screening

 

Publications

Lebold, Katie M., Jump, Donald B., Miller, Galen W., Wright, Charlotte L., Labut, Edwin M, Barton, Carrie Tanguay, Robert L., and Traber, Maret G. Vitamin E deficiency decreases long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid status in Zebrafish (Danio rerio).

Chen, Jiangfei ,Huang, Changjiang, Zheng, Lidan, Simonich, Michael , Bai, Chenglian, Tanguay, Robert and Dong, Qiaoxiang. Trimethyltin Chloride (TMT) Neurobehavioral Toxicity in Embryonic Zebrafish. In Press Neurotoxicology and Teratology

Truong, Lisa, Saili, Katerine S., Miller, John M., Hutchison, James E., and Tanguay, Robert L. Persistent Adult Zebrafish Behavioral Deficits Results from Acute Embryonic Exposure to Gold Nanoparticles. In Press Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C

Sangeet. L., La Du, J., Greenwood, J., and Tanguay, R.L. (2011). “Calpain 2 is required for the invasion of glioblastoma cells in the zebrafish brain microenvironment.” Journal of Neuroscience Research. In Press.

Wang, M., Chen, J., Lin, K., Chen, Y., Hu, W., Tanguay, R.L. (2011). “Chronic Zebrafish PFOS Exposure Alters Sex Ratio and Maternal Related Effects in F1 Offsprings.” Toxicology Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry DOI 10.1002/etc. 594. 

Harper, S.L., Carriere, J.L., Miller, J.M., Hutchinson, J.E., Maddux, B.L., and Tanguay, R.L. (2011). “Systematic Evaluation of Nanomaterial Toxicity: Utility of Standardized Materials and Rapid Assays.” ACS Nanox. 

Truong, L., Zaikova, T., Richman, E.K., Hutchison, J.E., and Tanguay, R.L. (2011 in Press). “ Media ionic strength impacts embryonic responses to engineered nanoparticle exposure.” Nanotoxicology. 

Ho, E., Dukovcic, S., Hobson, B., Wong, C.P., Miller,G., Hardin,K., Traber, M.G., and Tanguay, R.L. (2011) “Zinc Transporter Expression in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) During Development.” Comp Biochem Physiol C Toxicol Pharmacol.

Miller, G.W., Labut, E.M., Lebold, K.M., Floeter,A., Tanguay, R.L., Traber, M.G. (2011). “Zebrafish (Danio Rerio) Fed Vitamin E Deficient Diets Produce Embryos with Increased Morphologic Abnormalities and Mortality.” Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry.

Yang, D., Lauridsen, H., Buels,K., Lai-Har, C., La Du, J., Bruun,D., Olson, J.R., Tanguay,R.L., and Lein, P. (2011). “Chlorpyrifos-Oxon Disrupts Zebrafish Axonal Growth and Motor Behavior.” Toxicological Sciences.

Tanguay, R.L., and Truong, L. (2011). “Optimizing in vivo Assessment of Nano/bio Interactions to Guide Safer Material Design.” Cambridge Journals Online.

Truong,L., Harper, S.L., and Tanguay, R.L. (2011). “Evaulation of embyrotoxicity using the zebrafish model.” Methods Mol Biol. 691: 271-9. PMID: 20972759 NIHMSID: 311116

Kent, M.L., Buchner, C., Watral, V.G., La Du, J., Peterson, T.S., and Tanguay, R.L. (In Press). Development and maintenance of a specific pathogen free (SPF) zebrafish research for Pseudoloma neurophilia. Disease of Aquatic Organisms.

Truong, L., Moody, I.S., Stankus, D.P., Nason, J.A., Longergan, M.C., and Tanguay, R.L. (2010). “Differential Stability of Lead Sulfide Nanoparticles Influences Biological Responses in Embryonic Zebrafish.” Arch Toxicol. PMID: 21140132 NIHMSID: 311119

Bisson, W. H., Farrer, David, Kerkvliet, N. I., Kolluri, S. K., Mathew, L. K., O’Donnell, E.F., Saili, K.S., Sengupta, S., Tanguay, R. L. (2010). "The Anti-Inflammatory Drug Leflunomide is an Agonist of the Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor.” PLoS ONE 1-37. PMID: 20957046.

Bisson, W. H., Koch, D. C., O'Donnell, E. F., Khalil, S. M., Kerkvliet, N. I., Tanguay, R. L., Abagyan, R. and Kolluri, S. K. (2009). "Modeling of the Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor (AhR) Ligand Binding Domain and its Utility in Virtual Ligand Screening to Predict New AhR Ligands." J Med Chem 52(18): 5635-41. PMID: 19719119

Hillwalker, W. E., Allan, S. E., Tanguay, R. L. and Anderson, K. A. "Exploiting lipid-free tubing passive samplers and embryonic zebrafish to link site specific contaminant mixtures to biological responses." Chemosphere 79(1): 1-7. PMID: 20172587

Huaping, S., Huang, C., Lu, F., Yang, J., Tanguay, R. L., Sun, Z. and Dong, Q. (2009). "Comparative toxicity of PCBs and PBDEs using human cancer cell lines and zebrafish embryos." Asian Journal of Ecotoxicology 4(5): 625-633.

Jinga, R., Huanaga, Baia, C., Tanguay, R.L., and Donga, Q. (2009). “Optimization of activation, collection, dilution, and storage for zebrafish sperm.” Aquaculture, 209, Issue 1-2, 165-171.

Li, J., Shang, X., Zhao, Z., Tanguay, R. L., Dong, Q. and Huang, C. "Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in water, sediment, soil, and plants of the Aojiang River waterway in Wenzhou, China." J Hazard Mater 173(1-3): 75-81. PMID: 19726127

Mathew, L. K., Sengupta, S., Franzosa, J. A., Perry, J., La Du, J., Andreasen, E. A. and Tanguay, R. L. (2009). "Comparative expression profiling reveals an essential role for raldh2 in epimorphic regeneration." J Biol Chem 284(48): 33642-53. PMID: 19801676

Mathew, L. K., Simonich, M. T. and Tanguay, R. L. (2009). "AHR-dependent Misregulation of Wnt Signaling Disrupts Tissue Regeneration." Biochem Pharmacol 77(4): 498-507. PMID: 18938144

Stanley, K. A., Curtis, L. R., Simonich, S. L. and Tanguay, R. L. (2009). "Endosulfan I and Endosulfan Sulfate Disrupts Zebrafish Embryonic Development." Aquat Toxicol 95(4): 355-61. PMID: 19883949

Welsh, L., Tanguay, R. L. and Svoboda, K. R. (2009). "Uncoupling Nicotine Mediated Motoneuron Axonal Pathfinding Errors and Muscle Degeneration in Zebrafish." Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 237(1): 29-40. PMID: 18694773

Kent, M. L., S. W. Feist, Harper,C., Hoogstraten-Miller, S., Law, J.M., Sanchez-Morgado, J.M., Tanguay, R.L., Sanders, G.E., Spitshergen, J.M., and Whipps, C.M. (2009). "Recommendations for control of pathogens and infectious diseases in fish research facilities." Comp Biochem Physiol C Toxicol Pharmacol 149(2): 240-8. PMID: 18755294

Evans, B. R., Karchner, S. I., Allan, L. L., Pollenz, R. S., Tanguay, R. L., Jenny, M. J., Sherr, D. H. and Hahn, M. E. (2008). "Repression of Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor (AHR) Signaling by AHR Repressor: Role of DNA Binding and Competition for AHR Nuclear Translocator." Mol Pharmacol 73(2): 387-98. PMID: 18000031

Harper, S.L., J.A. Dahl, B.L.S. Maddux, R.L. Tanguay and J.E. Hutchison. (2008) Proactively designing nanomaterials to enhance performance and minimize hazard. International Journal of Nanotechnology, in press

Usenko, Crystal Y., Harper, Stacey L., Tanguay, Robert L., Fullerene C60 exposure elicits an oxidative stress response in embryonic zebrafish, Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology (2008), doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2007.12.030

Walter, RB, Timmins, GS, Tilton, SC, Orner, GO, Benninghoff, AD, Bailey, GS and Williams, DE (2008) Carcinogenesis Models: Focus on Xiphophorous and Rainbow Trout, in Oceans and Human Health, Elsevier Press, in press.

Benninghoff, A.D. and Williams, D.E. (2008) Identification of a transcriptional fingerprint of estrogen exposure in rainbow trout liver. Toxicol Sci. 2008 Jan;101(1):65-80. Epub 2007 Sep 6. PMID: 17823450

Andreasen, E.A., Mathew, L., Loehr. C. Hasson, R. and Tanguay, R.L. (2007) Aryl hydrocarbon receptor activation impairs extracellular matrix remodeling during zebra fish fin regeneration. Toxicol Sci. 2007 Jan;95(1):215-26. Epub 2006 Sep 26. PMID: 17003102

*Evans, B.R., Karchner, S. I., Allan, L.L., Pollenz, R. S., Tanguay, R.L., Jenny, M.J., Sherr, D.H. and Hahn, M.E. Repression of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) signaling by AHR repressor: role of DNA binding and competition for AHR nuclear translocator. Mol Pharmacol. 2008 Feb;73(2):387-98. Epub 2007 Nov 13. PMID: 18000031

Friedman, M., McQuistan, T., Hendricks, J. and Bailey, G . Protective effect of dietary tomatine against dibenzo[a,l]pyrene (DBP)-induced liver and stomach tumors in rainbow trout. Mol Nutr Food Res. 2007 Dec;51(12):1485-91. PMID: 17979099

Higdon, J.V., Delage, B., Williams, D.E. and Dashwood, R.H. Cruciferous vegetables and human cancer risk: epidemiologic evidence and mechanistic basis. Pharmacol Res. 2007 Mar;55(3):224-36. Epub 2007 Jan 25. PMID: 17317210

Isaacson, C. W., Usenko, C. Y., Tanguay, R. L., and Field, J. A. Quantification of fullerenes by LC/ESI-MS and its application to in vivo toxicity assays. Anal Chem 2007 Dec 1;79(23):9091-7. Epub 2007 Oct 27. PMID: 17963360

Mathew, L.K., Sengupta, S., Kawakami, A., Andreasen, E.A., Lohr, C.V., Loynes, C.A., Renshaw, S.A., Peterson, R.T., and Tanguay, R.L. (2007) Unraveling tissue regeneration pathways using chemical genetics. J Biol Chem. 2007 Nov 30;282(48):35202-10. Epub 2007 Sep 11. PMID: 17848559

Pratt, M.M., Reddy, A. P., Hendricks, J.D., Pereira, C., Kensler, T.W., and Bailey, G.S. (2007). The importance of carcinogen dose in chemoprevention studies: quantitative interrelationships between, dibenzo[a,l]pyrene dose, chlorophyllin dose, target organ DNA adduct biomarkers and final tumor outcome. Carcinogenesis. 2007 Mar;28(3):611-24. Epub 2006 Sep 14. PMID: 16973675

Simonich, M.T., McQuistan, T., Jubert, C., Pereira, C., Hendricks, J.D., Dashwood, R.H., Williams, D., and Bailey, G.S. (2007). Low-dose dietary chlorophyll inhibits multi-organ carcinogenesis in the rainbow trout. Food Chem Toxicol. 2007 Nov 4; [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 18069110

Tilton, S.C., Hendricks, J.D., Orner, G.A., Pereira, C.B., Bailey, G.S., and Williams, D.E. (2007) Gene expression analysis during tumor enhancement by the dietary phytochemical, 3,3'-diindolylmethane, in rainbow trout. Carcinogenesis. 2007 Jul;28(7):1589-98. Epub 2007 Feb 1. PMID: 17272308

Usenko, C.Y., Harper, S.L., and Tanguay, R.L. (2007) In vivo evaluation of carbon fullerene toxicity using embryonic zebrafish. Carbon 45: 1891–1898 (paper copy provided).

Tilton, F., Ladu, J. K., Vue, M., and Tanguay, R.L. (2006) Dithiocarbamates have a common toxic effect on zebrafish body axis formation. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 216(1): 55-68. PMID: 16797628

Reimers, M. J., Ladu, J.K., Periera C. B., Giovanini, J. and Tanguay, R.L. (2006) Ethanol-dependent toxicity in zebrafish is partially attenuated by antioxidants. Neurotoxicol Teratol. 28(4): p. 497-508. PMID: 16904866

Prasch, A.L. Tanguay R.L., Mehta, V., Heideman W., and Peterson R.E. (2006) Identification of zebrafish ARNT1 homologs: 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin toxicity in the developing zebrafish requires ARNT1. Mol Pharmacol. 2006 Mar;69(3):776-87. Epub 2005 Nov 23. MID: 16306231