Zebrafish have only been used as model organism by a lot of labs in the last 15 years or so. In the 1970s George Streisinger, a scientist at the University of Oregon, was interested in using a vertebrate model organism that was simpler than the mouse and easy to manipulate genetically. As a tropical fish enthusiast, he chose the zebrafish, which is commonly found in pet shops and home aquaria. Streisinger's collegues in Oregon, amongst them Chuck Kimmel were impressed with the ease of using the fish and for Kimmel the embryo was particularly attractive for studying nervous system development. Since the mid 1990's many more scientists started using zebrafish as a model organism to study developmental biology. Currently there are at least 600 laboratories around the world that use zebrafish. | |
The big screensA big step forward in the zebrafish field came when two large genetic searches for mutants were carried out in the early 1990s. One was led by Nobel prize winner Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard in Tübingen, Germany and the other by Wolfgang Driever and Mark Fishman in Boston, USA. The identification of mutants is one of the most important strategies for the study of many areas of biology. A mutation provides often provides the first insight into the role of no deposit casino australia the gene in normal development or in a healthy individual. |
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Sequencing the genomeZebrafish researchers needed more genetic resources in order to understand and characterise the mutants further. The community got together to initiate the sequencing of the whole zebrafish genome. Which began in 2001 at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge. External link to the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute zebrafish resources page | |