28 May 2009

Glowing monkeys 'to aid research'



By Jason Palmer
Science and technology reporter, BBC News

Glowing marmoset feet (Nature)
The marmosets glow an eerie green under UV light

Genetically modified primates that glow green and pass the trait on to their offspring co
uld aid the fight against human disease.

Though primates that make a glowing protein have been created before, these are the first to keep the change in their bloodlines.

Future modifications could lead to treatments for a range of diseases.


The "transgenic" marmosets, created by a Japanese team, have been described in the journal Nature.

The work raises a number of ethical questions about deliberately exposing a bloodline of animals to such diseases.

Scientists have managed to modify the genes of many living organisms in recent years, ranging from bacteria to mice.

Mice have been particularly useful experimental models for studying a wide range of human diseases as modified genes are passed on from parents to progeny.

However, mice are not useful for some human diseases because they are not sufficiently similar to produce effects that are meaningful to human disease. Studies of mice with Alzheimer's disease, for example, were stymied simply because their brains were too small to scan at sufficient resolution.

link : http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8070252.stm