How a tiny pet store fish became the center of neuroscience research 
By Sahana Sitaraman US Source: asbmb 11/27/2021
Sahana Sitaraman
Every morning, I would rush to the lab to see if my fish had laid eggs. I watched the brain cells of these completely transparent organisms multiply under the lens. I still remember the first time I saw a live neuron grow in front of my eyes, in the brain of a young fish larva. This striped tropical fish could fit in the palm of my hands, and yet is one of the most important organisms in biology, allowing researchers to answer fundamental questions in neuroscience, developmental, cancer, disease and regenerative biology.
 

The beginnings of zebrafish research can be traced back to early 1930s when Charles Creaser at Wayne State University in Detroit began using zebrafish (Danio rerio) eggs to show students the development of a live embryo and the movement of blood inside its arteries. Creaser was able to do this because zebrafish females release eggs from their body which are fertilized by the sperm released from the male. The freshly formed embryo is accessible to the observer from the moment it is fertilized. The fact that zebrafish embryos and larvae are transparent means studying the internal parts of the animal is a breeze. Creaser established methods for rearing, feeding and breeding zebrafish in the lab, but widespread use of the animal did not take off for another three decades.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3101Red snapper poaching claims prompt ban of Mexican fishing boats from U.S. ports on Gulf of Mexicotampabay2022-02-08US
3102Indian police files case against a black marlin fish after it attacks and kills fishermanmalaymail2022-02-09IN
3103Chile’s mysterious fish death phenomenon is perplexing scientistseuronews2022-02-22CL
3104Tŝilhqot’in government ‘outraged’ by Alaskan commercial harvest of salmon bound for B.C.Global News2022-02-14CA
3105"Nothing, there’s nothing": Senegal’s plummeting fish stocks drive migrant surge to Europeeuronews2022-02-11SN
3106Oneida County woman arrested for animal cruelty after killing shared pet fishcbs6albany2022-02-11US
3107Chinese Fishing Fleet Wreaks Havoc in Latin American Oceansdialogo-americas.com2022-02-09EC
3108Simcoe man “learned the expensive way” that ice fishing season is off to a slow startfishncanada2022-01-12CA
3109North Carolina man breaks 60-year-old fishing recordFox News2022-02-16US
3110California man caught with live, endangered sturgeon stuffed in trunk of carFox News2022-02-17US
3111Охотоморская путина: вылов минтая вырос до 341 тыс. тоннРыболовство2022-02-16RU
3112Scientists discover extremely rare baby ghost shark: ‘We just don’t see them’independent2022-02-16UK
3113Plans in place to support healthy Black Ash Creek trout populationCollingwood Today2019-04-11CA
3114Scientists Race to Gather Winter Data on Warming Great LakesAssociated Press2022-02-03US
3115Mexico Defends Fishermen as US Poaching Restrictions BeginAssociated Press2022-02-08US
3116В Мурманской области вырос объем выращивания лососевых видов рыбРыболовство2022-02-11RU
3117Учёные не знают, куда исчезает этот вид мусора в океанеaif2022-02-10RU
3118Nearly 250K fish escape from Washington fish hatcheryFox News2022-02-07US
3119Nearly Extinct ‘Iconic’ Fish Now Growing To Impressive Size in New YorkHudson2022-02-04US
3120'I might be 84 but that's nothing': Three generations gather for a Wisconsin Women Fish outing on Green BayMilwaukee Journal Sentinel2022-01-22US
3121Pufferfish rushed to dentist to have its teeth sawed in half after becoming too long to eatindy2022-01-23UK
3122‘Gold in the sea’: Brazil’s booming fish bladder tradealjazeera2022-01-20CN
3123Chinese fishermen find underwater spying device off Jiangsu coastthestandard2022-01-18HK
3124In India, aquaculture has turned a sprawling lake into fish pondssalon2022-01-23IN
3125Here's how scientists are using machine learning to listen to fishabcnews2022-01-23US

215 216 217 124 of [218 - pages.]