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Glowing fish planned to be first GE pet 22 November
2003
WASHINGTON: A little tropical fish that glows
fluorescent red will be the first genetically engineered pet,
a Texas-based company said yesterday.
The zebra fish were originally developed
to detect environmental toxins, but Alan Blake and colleagues
at Yorktown Technologies, LP licensed them to sell as pets.
"These fish were bred to help fight
environmental pollution," Blake said in a telephone interview.
"They were bred to fluoresce in the presence of toxins."
Scientists have for decades used a gene
called green fluorescent protein, taken from jellyfish, to
help in research. The fish, sold under the trademarked name
GloFish, carry a similar gene taken from a sea coral that
makes it glow all the time.
Blake said there is no evidence the fish
will pose any threat to the environment. Normal zebra fish are
commonly used in aquariums and cannot survive in non-tropical
waters.
"They are very bright under any type of
light," Blake said. "Under ultraviolet light in a dark room
they will appear to be glowing in the dark."
Blake, who before he set up the new
business ran an internet company, says he did not have a
particular interest in fish before. "I had an aquarium when I
was about 10," he said.
The fish, developed at the National
University of Singapore by researcher Zhiyuan Gong, are also
available as pets in Taiwan, the company said. They will sell
for about $US5 ($NZ7.85) apiece at pet stores in January.
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