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''The visual nature of the fish makes it an attractive model for studying cancer,'' adds Zon. ''We can track a cancer and follow the fate of individual cells as the tumor grows and spreads.''
Now that the zebrafish model has been created, Zon's team will use it to examine how melanomas metastasize, and to look for other gene mutations besides the p53 mutation that participate in transforming moles into malignant melanomas. ''Some of these genes may lead us to excellent pharmaceutical targets for treatment of melanomas,'' Zon says.
Once these targets are identified, the zebrafish can be used to test potential anti-melanoma drugs that hit the targets. Researchers will also be able to test the effects of risk factors for human melanoma, such as exposure to ultraviolet radiation, and how they interact with gene mutations to cause disease.
Finally, Zon, who also directs the Children's Hospital Boston Stem Cell Program, will use the fish to learn more about cancer stem cells. Most tumor cells, when transplanted, can't give rise to a new cancer because they lack the capacity to divide and multiply. But tumors often have a subgroup of cells that can self-renew, as stem cells do, and create a new cancer -- as seen in these melanoma experiments. Studying these cells may turn up genes involved in metastasis, for example. ''We're hoping to look at cancer as a stem cell problem,'' says Zon.
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