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The University of Maine
Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology, and Molecular Biology
Orono, ME 04469
Zebrafish have rapidly become a major model organism for the study of a variety of questions related to human health, including development, cancer, and the effects of toxicological agents. Their small size, low cost, and the ease of exposure to toxic compounds in the aquatic environment make them particularly attractive and tractable for toxicological studies. The above photographs are of transgenic zebrafish containing a green flourescent protein under control of a metallothionein gene promoter. The metallothionein protein binds heavy metals within the cell, and the promoter or "on/off" signal for this gene is highly responsive to increased intracellular heavy-metal concentrations. Thus when intracellular heavy-metal concentrations increase the metallothionein promoter is activated and "turns on" transcription of the green flourescent protein. Studies are underway to utilize this transgenic model as a sentinel organism for the indication of heavy-metal polluted water.
Another model our laboratory utilizes for the study of zinc homeostasis is the squirrelfish (Holocentrus adscensionis). The squirrelfish is a tropical coral reef fish that exhibits an ecxeptional zinc metabolism. this family of fish (Holocentridae) are able to sequester copious amounts of zinc in the liver and pass this zinc to the reproductive organs when needed for embryo development. By utilizing this zinc hyperaccumulator we are able to map several processes involved in zinc mediated metabolism.