Background: Methyl CpG binding protein 2 (MECP2) is vital for neuronal function as it is an essential global modulator of transcription, and mutations in MECP2 are the most common cause of Rett syndrome, an X-linked neurodevelopmental disorder. Patients diagnosed with Rett syndrome have increased risk for epilepsy as well as problems with anxiety and social communication. Using the zebrafish mecp2Q63X line, this study aimed to increase our understanding of the role of mecp2 in regulation of seizures and general locomotion, ontogeny of social behaviour, and adult socialization and anxiety behaviour. To determine responses of mecp2-/- zebrafish to a stimulating convulsant, general locomotor activity was measured at 5 days post-fertilization (dpf) in sibling mecp2+/+, mecp2+/-, and mecp2-/- fish after treatment with a GABAA receptor antagonist pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) at varying concentrations. Responses to social stimulus were investigated in larval (21 dpf) and adult mecp2-/- and mecp2+/+ fish. Anxiety responses to a novel tank and whole-body cortisol levels were also measured in adult mecp2-/- and control mecp2+/+ zebrafish.
Results: The behavioural tests showed that mecp2-/- zebrafish displayed hypolocomotion at the larval stage, along with increased freezing time and thigmotaxis, and higher whole-body cortisol levels in adulthood. However, lack of functional Mecp2 did not change the hyper-locomotion response to PTZ at 5 dpf or affect the social preference for visual social stimulus at 21 dpf and in adulthood.
Conclusions: Functional mecp2 modulated larval locomotion and behavioural anxiety at different ages and adult cortisol levels, but lacking mecp2 did not alter adult locomotion or socialization, and developmental sociability and PTZ-induced hyperlocomotion in zebrafish. Given the variability reported in humans and rodent Mecp2 models, studies using zebrafish can explore vital elements of MECP2’s role across development and improve our understanding of neural mechanisms underlying neurodevelopmental disorders.