Updated
Updated · My Buckhannon · May 13
WVU Team Links TUBB4B Loss to Retinal Defects in Zebrafish, Beating Mouse Models
Updated
Updated · My Buckhannon · May 13

WVU Team Links TUBB4B Loss to Retinal Defects in Zebrafish, Beating Mouse Models

1 articles · Updated · My Buckhannon · May 13
  • Eric Horstick’s WVU group found that deleting TUBB4B in zebrafish triggered severe retinal defects, matching the blindness seen in humans with the mutation.
  • Mouse models had reproduced the deafness tied to TUBB4B loss but not the vision damage, making the zebrafish result a closer fit for studying the disease mechanism.
  • About 70% of zebrafish genes overlap with humans, and the fish develop rapidly enough for researchers to watch whole-brain activity and test genetic changes within days.
  • The finding grew out of Horstick’s broader work on left-right behavioral bias in roughly 2,500 lab fish, where light exposure early in development appears to shape turning preferences.
  • That combination of fast genetics and real-time neural imaging could give WVU researchers a new tool for probing retinal disease and other early brain-development disorders.
This fish models human blindness better than mice. What other diseases are we studying in the wrong animal?
If light dictates a fish’s 'handedness', could environmental cues be shaping our brains more than our genes?