UsaFishBox
Welcome to USAFishBox! You are currently viewing the forum as a guest. To view the index and portal you must be a member. Please click the register button to join NOW for FREE.!..Finally check out the 24 hour live chat !!!
UsaFishBox
Welcome to USAFishBox! You are currently viewing the forum as a guest. To view the index and portal you must be a member. Please click the register button to join NOW for FREE.!..Finally check out the 24 hour live chat !!!
UsaFishBox
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

UsaFishBox

USA Fishbox is THE place where fish freaks come together. Here at USA we talk aquatics all day long. If you are new please sign up and join in.
 
facebookForumHomeLatest imagesLog inRegister
Welcome to USA Fishbox. If you are a guest please sign up. This forum is 100% free to use.
Similar topics




















 

 Zebra fish in a gene-mutation experiment at the NIH.

Go down 
AuthorMessage
KMX
Admin
Admin
KMX


Posts : 16094
Location : Mansfield, TX
Favorite Fish: : African Cichlids of all kinds.

Zebra fish in a gene-mutation experiment at the NIH. Empty
PostSubject: Zebra fish in a gene-mutation experiment at the NIH.   Zebra fish in a gene-mutation experiment at the NIH. Icon_minitime11/8/2011, 10:14 am

Zebra fish in a gene-mutation experiment at the NIH. St_underwaterlabrat_f
Zebra fish in a gene-mutation experiment at the NIH.
Photo: National Geographic Society


When Seattle Children’s Research Institute opens a pediatric research wing this winter, it will skip rodents to stock a better lab animal: the Danio rerio. That’s the zebra fish, a striped and translucent floater commonly sold for a buck at pet stores. Sure, fish can’t jog on a tiny treadmill or navigate a maze. But biologists at the University of Oregon discovered decades ago that the swimmers mimic human physiology pretty well. Didn’t know you had so much in common with a pet store fish? Their genetic makeup and embryonic development are similar to ours. Plus, they lay transparent eggs by the boatload. Unlike with mice, researchers don’t need to perform dissections to study fetal development—they can just zoom in with a microscope to track growth from single-cell embryo to hatchling. And because the gestation period is days instead of weeks, tracking generational shifts is easier, too.

“A lot of work in this area has been done in mice, but this is a much quicker and inexpensive way to answer some of the same questions,” says Ida Washington, director of the Office of Animal Care at SCRI, who hopes gene manipulation in embryonic fish hearts might ultimately teach researchers how to fix malformed organs in human newborns. More and more specialized strains of zebra fish are becoming available all the time: The Zebrafish International Resource Center estimates that by 2014 it will have 5,000 boutique variants available, up from 1,380 today. Wet labs at the University of Oregon are looking at what fish synapse formation can tell us about autism. Other researchers are using zebra fish to study gene therapies for cancers and to develop disease degeneration models for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Not a bad bioscientific splash for such a little fish.



http://www.wired.com/magazine/2011/11/st_underwaterlabrat/



Zebra fish in a gene-mutation experiment at the NIH. 102652
Back to top Go down
 
Zebra fish in a gene-mutation experiment at the NIH.
Back to top 
Page 1 of 1
 Similar topics
-
» Gene code or food?
» backgound experiment
» Pond Experiment 2011

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
UsaFishBox :: :: Freshwater Aquaria :: General Freshwater Fish Discussion-
Jump to: