The Unsung Heroes Of Biomedical Research

Asian Scientist Magazine brings you the motley crew of model organisms that pioneered discovery in the 21st century.

#10 THE PUFFERFISH – Fugu rubripes

Fugu rubripes—the tiger pufferfish—is a toxic, inflatable wonder-fish, with a compact genome eight times smaller than the human genome. Despite some extraordinary similarities with human DNA, their genomes are largely free of so-called ‘junk’ DNA—although this ‘junk’ may have functions that are yet to be understood. Scientists have used this streamlining like a Rosetta stone, to help unlock corresponding information in the human genome. So far, one analysis of Fugu DNA has predicted the existence of 900 as-yet undiscovered human genes.

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Zaria Gorvett is a freelance science writer based in the UK. She graduated with a bachelors degree in biological science from the University of Exeter, UK and a masters degree in medical microbiology from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK.

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