A Fish That's Almost Human?

Zebra fish help scientists unravel some of the most complex secrets of life.

ByABC News
July 31, 2007, 4:48 PM

Aug. 1, 2007 — -- A tiny fish the size of a minnow is helping scientists unravel some of the most complex secrets of life and it could have a profound impact on the effort to treat various human diseases and understand how we became what we are. That's because the zebra fish is so closely related to humans that we might as well call it cousin.

"It's damn similar" to us, said Mary Ellen Lane, an expert on the zebra fish and a Rice University researcher on genetics. For every gene that Lane and her associates have isolated in the small, striped fish, they've found a human gene that functions in the same way. Humans and zebra fish share at least 80 percent of the same genes, which is why this freshwater fish has become an obsession among scientists around the world.

It grows from a fertilized embryo to a mature adult in just three months to four months, which makes it an ideal candidate for genetic research. In a sense, Lane's Houston lab is an evolutionary hot spot because she brings about genetic changes that pass from generation to generation, sometimes resulting in new animals that look or behave quite differently from their ancestors.

The embryo matures outside the mother and it is transparent, so the changes can be observed under a low resolution microscope and documented through time-lapse digital photography. That might suggest that scientists are close to learning all there is to know about genetics, but what they are really learning is the field is so incredibly complex that it may be decades before they have some of the most important answers.

"As we answer every question we generate 10 more," Lane said.

But the zebra fish stands ready to lend a hand, or at least a fin, to figuring out just what is going on, and which genes are doing what, as it develops its neurological system. Researchers are able to chemically tweak various genes, making them more or less expressive, and see what changes.

"Sometimes nothing happens. Sometimes you get an embryo that is just dead and not very interesting. And sometimes you get an embryo that looks very, very interesting, but different from the way it's supposed to," she said. "It might have one eye instead of two, or it might have a head that's bigger or smaller, it might have no ears. We've essentially been able to understand the genes that are involved in all of these processes."