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
476Ohio teens state fishing record officially certified after 101-pound blue catfish catchFox News2024-05-08US
477Former CFL star Brad Sinopoli tackling new waters as full-time fishing guidebrandonsun2024-05-07CA
478Благословенные апрельские рыбалкиohotniki2024-04-29RU
479Fisherman hooks prehistoric 200-pound alligatorFox News2024-05-04US
480Angler breaks 43-year-old record after reeling in large perch in Lake MichiganFOX 13 News2024-05-07US
481Poachers nailed after hiding fish in strange placesfoxnews2024-05-04US
482Tuna fishing season using a technique thousands of years old opens in Spain with some of those landed on first daysurinenglish2024-04-19SP
483Filipino fishermen blame sand mining for declining catchbworldonline2024-04-21PH
484Warming seas push Indias fishers into distant, and more dangerous, watersmongabay2024-04-23IN
485Douglas County man arrested after thousands of hatchery fish poisonedkobi52024-04-25US
486Navigating the rise in conflicts between humans and fishing cats in Bangladeshmongabay2024-04-25BD
487How local fishermen found a group of blackfin tuna while fishing in Gulf of MexicoBradenton Herald2024-04-21US
488Unlike Earnest Hemingway's epic tale "The Old Man and the Sea," the sharks did not come along and eat the giant. Though, after Asbury Park Press2024-04-22US
489117 operations to tackle fish bombing in Sabah since 2021nst2024-04-24MY
490Woman catches 30-pound koi fish in Texas lakeklfy2024-04-26US
491Fewer fish and more rules lead to illegal catches, Italian fishers saymongabay2024-04-26IT
492BC salmon farmer hopes algae can replace wild fish as feed ingredientmycomoxvalleynow2024-04-27CA
493The Moon brings a wild but precarious fish orgy to California's beachesBBC News2024-04-19US
494More California dog owners advised to be aware of salmon poisoning diseasektla2024-04-23US
495Dead Fish Suddenly Found in California Lake Raises Alarmsmsn2024-04-30US
496Angler who posed with giant salmon for proud Facebook picture is netted for illegal fishing and fined nearly £1,000Daily Mail2024-03-16UK
497The patin are gone: the freshwater war against suckermouth catfishfreemalaysiatoday2024-04-13MY
498Nature reserve to be created next to new nuclear plant that will kill tonnes of fish a yeartelegraph2024-04-16UK
499San Antonio angler reels in 30-inch unusual catch in neighborhood pondmysanantonio2024-04-13US
500Girls record catfish sparks controversyusatoday2024-04-18US

214 215 216 19 of [217 - pages.]