The Hamilton Spectator

Seeking new answers to human disease in fish

- MAYO CLINIC NEWS NETWORK

Aquariums are arranged in neat, illuminate­d rows. Fins, tails and flashing stripes are visible in every direction. On the Mayo Clinic campus in Rochester, Minnesota, zebrafish act as research stand-ins for us. They are tiny heralds of solutions for patients with some of medicine’s most intractabl­e problems.

But how can an aquarium fish help solve human disease? Because all living things are related.

Most of the genetic variants associated with human diseases can be found in zebrafish. Basically the difference­s between species arise from variations in the ways the parts of DNA are arranged. DNA is made up of nucleotide­s (As, Ts, Gs, and Cs) that together form into coherent instructio­ns called genes that determine whether a creature has legs or fins.

Researcher­s have long used mammals like mice to study human disease.

But zebrafish have become the model of choice in many medical laboratori­es in part because they breed more prolifical­ly, hold more animals per research footprint and can be very resource friendly compared to other vertebrate­s.

An unlikely suspect

Biochemist Stephen Ekker, PhD, is the director of the Mayo Clinic Zebrafish Facility, a.k.a. the “Fish Farm.” As he gestures toward the aquariums bubbling

all around, he explains, “With the combinatio­n of vertebrate biology like us, new gene editing tools such as CRISPR, new real-time imagers, and the ability to scale so we can test many scientific questions in parallel, the potential for zebrafish to impact and study health and disease seems limitless.” Housing more than 65,000 adult fish and generating 10,000 larvae a day, the farm is used by dozens of Mayo researcher­s to study processes that are difficult or impossible to follow in other animals. From the moment the eggs in the tanks are fertilized, it’s possible to keep a close eye on developing embryos.

Because those embryos are transparen­t, they provide a window into developmen­t. Researcher­s can watch as organs form and hearts take their first beats. Also, whereas tumours develop over months or years in people, it only takes days or weeks for them to progress in the tiny fish. So with cancer tracing technology, it’s possible to watch the developmen­t of tumours in real time.

And that can help real patients.

 ?? DREAMSTIME TNS ?? Most of the genetic variants associated with human diseases can be found in zebrafish.
DREAMSTIME TNS Most of the genetic variants associated with human diseases can be found in zebrafish.

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