See-Through Fish Help Cancer Research 112
Hugh Pickens writes "What is transparent, swims, and helps cure cancer? Caspar the friendly fish — a zebrafish bred with a see-through body to make studying disease processes easier for rapidly changing processes such as cancer, Zebrafish are genetically similar to humans in many ways and serve as good models for human biology and disease. In one experiment, researchers inserted a fluorescent melanoma tumor into the abdominal cavity of the transparent fish and by observing the fish under a microscope, they found that the cancer cells started spreading within five days and could actually see individual cells spreading. "The process by which a tumor goes from being localized to widespread and ultimately fatal is the most vexing problem that oncologists face," says Richard White, a clinical fellow in the Stem Cell Program at Children's Hospital Boston. "We don't know why cancer cells decide to move away from their primary site to other parts in the body." Researchers created the transparent fish, (photo) by mating two existing zebrafish breeds, one that lacked a reflective skin pigment and the other without black pigment. The offspring had only yellow skin pigment, essentially appearing clear."
That's not a transparent fish... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Blob fish [lumq.com]
No muscles, just gelantinous flesh so it can float just above the sea-bed without exerting any energy and eat anything that happens to float by.
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It's a space station ...
Re:That's not a transparent fish... (Score:5, Funny)
They're pretty but having to wipe them down with Windex once a week is a pain. Oh, also they don't seem to live more than a week.
you call that a transparent fish? THIS ... (Score:5, Funny)
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I am getting sick of this HDR stuff.
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Sneaky marketing, not a breakthrough? (Score:2)
Someone thinking carefully expresses thoughts carefully. A careful-thinking person would never say "decide to", because that communicates the idea that the cancer cells are thinking.
So, maybe you are right. Maybe it's just fraud masquerading as science, sneaky marketing, not a breakthrough. Maybe they are just trying to sell their own brand of transparent fish.
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That is a bit pedantic. The reason for the movement of the cells is unknown. "Decide to" is only a placeholder for the actual mechanism, which they are trying to discover. Anthropomorphism is a useful way to express that lack of knowledge. Only someone completely unfamiliar with the concept of cancer would leap to "Oh noes, teh cancer thinks!!"
The summary itself says that the ze
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Someone thinking carefully expresses thoughts carefully. A careful-thinking person would never say "decide to", because that communicates the idea that the cancer cells are thinking.
Who said anything about thinking? "Decision" is a word that is often used in cellular biology to describe cellular events in response to molecular mechanisms that don't involve thoughts. It's a simple, time saving term that is easy for the general public to understand and is not too technical. As this was not a technical report it's actually a good thing to make it generally accessible. If you use jargon, people without a background in what you're talking about often feel offended, like you're trying t
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(4) 10G
(1) 55G
(1) 30G
(1) 15G
(2) 2G
(1) 3G
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I also keep a pretty healthy bluegill, who gets a pretty steady diet of kitchen scraps.
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Add one Crawfish*
*Make sure lid is secure and wire pathways small. They have excellent escape tactics... albiet poor strategy
2 10g, 1 20L coffee table [instructables.com], 1 1g, and various clear bucket sorts of breeding / quarantine tanks
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http://limitofx.com/ [limitofx.com]
I keep my tank very heavily planted, so that would be just too sad!
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Royal Rainbow (Score:3, Funny)
Strange. The Emperor seems quite fond of the dish...
DIY see-through zebrafish (Score:3, Funny)
2) Order the genes - look up oligonucleotide synthesis companies, or DIY with the open source machine.
3) Download the biokit [sourceforge.net] for do-it-yourself genetic engineering.
4) ??? (tanks, supplies, tissue culture, obtaining zebra fish and feed
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making us invisible (Score:2, Funny)
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step 1) make tonyahn transparent
step 2) GIVE TONYAHN FLURO CANCER
step 3) ???
step 4) profit!
Your death sometime around step 3 is implied
When.. (Score:4, Funny)
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Don't you mean for the TSA?
They are? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:They are? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:They are? (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5055391 [npr.org]
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wrong database! (Score:3, Informative)
Zebrafish International Resource Center (Score:4, Interesting)
He also has a great family and we had dinner at his house a couple weeks ago, Zoltán making a tasty Thai soup. The best part about visiting is that his wife is French and they're always talking in various languages at the dinner table. For some reason when the dog is bad, they always chastise him in German.
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My favorite part is "..says Richard White, a clinical fellow in the Stem Cell Program.."
It sounds like they just walked in to the building and saw some guy in a lab coat and thought "Hey, theres a clinical looking fellow! lets ask him what he thinks!"
Re:Zebrafish International Resource Center (Score:4, Insightful)
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"I speak Spanish to God, Italian to women, French to men and German to my horse" (attributed to Charles V)
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Re:Zebrafish International RESCUE Center? (Score:2)
New 80's Marketing Opportunity (Score:3, Funny)
For the record... (Score:1)
transparent zebrafish (Score:1)
zebra fish (Score:1)
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Of course It's still a zebra fish, just with a rather nasty mutation. Both It's parents were Zebra fish with no other genetic modification otherwise.
Think about it, people like siamese twins, albinos and the like are still called humans even thuogh they have some rather glaring differences. I see no reason why these fish wouldn't be called Zebra Fish.
The real breakthrough (Score:4, Funny)
Fuck cancer, I wanna be transparent too !
Not just cancer (Score:5, Informative)
1. You can see all sorts of diseases in them, not just cancer.
2. They're cheap. A small team at a small lab, like at a State College [brockport.edu] (see Project #4), can do good quality research with them. Even better, several small teams can be researching concurrently.
Age old question. (Score:2)
Why did the cancer cell cross the road? To metastasize.
[Thank you Nullav [slashdot.org] (and others).]
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I have a much cheaper solution that, when applied to the deer, will greatly reduce the number of car-deer accidents:
http://www.quarry.nildram.co.uk/ExpFCAR.jpg [nildram.co.uk]
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That, and teach people to drive. I've had de
Another Transparent Creature? (Score:2, Informative)
Seen them before (Score:1)
Wake me when they actually make progress (Score:1)
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In particular, zebrafish are popular for studying developmental biology, because they're clear as embryos and scientists can watch an organism form - in particular, they can mess up some genes and see what effect that has on the fish's development.
What's great about this clear fish line is that it brings the same see-through-vertebrate benefits to all kinds of other researchers.
Think of it as a debugging tool. It's a way to get printf stateme
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I'm an experimental embryologist. Would you like to volunteer your baby for me to experiment on and section? No? See, that's why animal model are good. We can investigate the causes of diseases like spinal bifida without horrible ethical violations.
Giving fish cancer? (Score:1)
More to the point... (Score:2, Interesting)
1.) I think it's safe to say noone contracts cancer by getting injected with a tumor
2.) A melanoma (external skin cancer) would probably never originate inside the abdominal cavity. In other words, by implanting it you have already "metastasized" it.
and most importantly,
3.) It's a fish. It's not a human. It's not even a mammal. It's not even warm blooded. In other words, whil
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So, clearly, cancer does not work the same way in humans and mice.
You're mistaking treatment with mechanisms. It turns out the basic mechanisms in cancer development are similar across species. The complete picture is still not known - which is why the "War on Cancer" turns out to have not produced the "cures" that were expected back in the seventies. Cancer is a generic term, covering a wide range of individual and different diseases. Understanding the biology behind it is what has been a slow, pa
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I would say that treatment and mechanism are related. Cancer has been "cured" in mice dozens of times and the reason those cures don't work in humans is not a dosage or a genetic issue. Rather it's that the drugs used while addressing a particular mechanism miss others. For example drugs that work great in mice f
picture of the fish (Score:2)
Another method... (Score:2)
Cure for Cancer (Score:1)
Talk About... (Score:2)
Mutant has been around for a while (Score:1)
Re:ew (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:ew (Score:4, Funny)
It would be ironic if they cured cancer, but they had to make you transparent first...
Re:ew (Score:4, Funny)
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Yeah, yeah. That's what I kept telling the cops. They said, "'k, son, maybe so, but they're still underaged."
Thank you, thank you. I'll be here in court all week. Don't forget to tip your waiter, and don't eat the fish platter.
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Just wait 'till it poops.
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here there be humor (Score:4, Informative)
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I have a deathly phobia of Boo-Berry cereal, you insensitive clod!
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