Current:Home > MarketsHow scientists engineered a see-through squid with its brain in plain view -FundPrime
How scientists engineered a see-through squid with its brain in plain view
View
Date:2025-04-13 06:18:26
Becoming invisible usually requires magic.
For some thumb-sized squid, though, all it takes is a little genetic tweaking.
Once these squid are genetically altered, "they're really hard to spot," even for their caretakers, says Joshua Rosenthal, a senior scientist at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass.
"We know we put it in this aquarium, but they might look for a half hour before they can actually see it," Rosenthal says. "They're that transparent."
The see-through squid are offering scientists a new way to study the biology of a creature that is intact and moving freely.
"It changes the way you interpret what's going on in this animal," says Caroline Albertin, a fellow at the lab. "You can look through and see their three hearts beating, you can see their brain."
The transparent squid is a genetically altered version of the hummingbird bobtail squid, a species usually found in the tropical waters from Indonesia to China and Japan. It's typically smaller than a thumb and shaped like a dumpling. And like other cephalopods, it has a relatively large and sophisticated brain.
The see-through version is made possible by a gene editing technology called CRISPR, which became popular nearly a decade ago.
Albertin and Rosenthal thought they might be able to use CRISPR to create a special squid for research. They focused on the hummingbird bobtail squid because it is small, a prodigious breeder, and thrives in lab aquariums, including one at the lab in Woods Hole.
"You can see him right there in the bottom," Rosenthal says, "just kind of sitting there, hunkered down in the sand."
The squid is one that has not been genetically altered. So it is camouflaged to blend in with the sand. That's possible because of organs in its skin called chromatophores. They contain pigment that can be manipulated to change the squid's appearance.
Albertin and Rosenthal wanted to use CRISPR to create a bobtail squid without any pigment, an albino. And they knew that in other squid, pigment depends on the presence of a gene called TDO.
"So we tried to knock out TDO," Albertin says, "and nothing happened."
It turned out that bobtail squid have a second gene that also affects pigment.
"When we targeted that gene, lo and behold we were able to get albinos," Albertin says.
Because even unaltered squid have clear blood, thin skin, and no bones, the albinos are all but transparent unless light hits them at just the right angle.
The team described their success in July in the journal Current Biology.
Lots of labs would like to use the see-through squid. So in the lab at Woods Hole, a team of technicians is putting in long hours to create more of them.
Albertin lets me look over the shoulder of a technician who's looking through a microscope at a squid embryo smaller than a BB pellet.
She's using a pair of forceps to gently remove the "jelly layers" that surround the egg sac. Later, she'll use a quartz needle to inject the embryo with genetic material that will delete the pigment genes and create a transparent squid.
Early on, Albertin and Rosenthal realized these animals would be of interest to brain scientists. So they contacted Ivan Soltesz at Stanford and Cristopher Niell at the University of Oregon.
"We said, 'Hey, you guys, we have this incredible animal, want to look at its brain," Rosenthal says. "They jumped on it."
Soltesz and Niell inserted a fluorescent dye into an area of the brain that processes visual information. The dye glows when it's near brain cells that are active.
Then the scientists projected images onto a screen in front of the squid. And the brain areas involved in vision began to glow, something that would have been impossible to see in a squid with pigment.
"The evidence that they were able to get from this made all of us kind of jump through our skins," Albertin says. "It was really exciting."
Because it suggests that her see-through squid will help scientists understand not only cephalopods, but all living creatures.
veryGood! (76)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Illinois man wins $3 million scratch-off game, runs into 7-Eleven to hug store owner
- Oregon decriminalized drugs in 2020. Now officials are declaring a fentanyl state of emergency
- Elmo takes a turn as a therapist after asking 'How is everybody doing?'
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Preliminary test crashes indicate the nation’s guardrail system can’t handle heavy electric vehicles
- Clydesdale foal joins the fold ahead of iconic horses' Budweiser Super Bowl commercial return
- Hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin calls Harvard students whiny snowflakes
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- Memories tied up in boxes and boxes of pictures? Here's how to scan photos easily
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- 4 NHL players charged with sexual assault in 2018 case, lawyers say
- Man accused of beheading his father, police investigating video allegedly showing him with the head
- Marvel's 'Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur' is still a stone cold groove
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Music from Taylor Swift, Bad Bunny, Drake and more could be pulled from TikTok: Here's why
- The mystery of Amelia Earhart has tantalized for 86 years: Why it's taken so long to solve
- Broadway Star Hinton Battle Dead at 67
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Grave peril of digital conspiracy theories: ‘What happens when no one believes anything anymore?’
Man accused of destroying Satanic Temple display at Iowa Capitol is now charged with hate crime
Environmentalists See Nevada Supreme Court Ruling Bringing State’s Water Management ‘Into the 21st Century’
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Preliminary test crashes indicate the nation’s guardrail system can’t handle heavy electric vehicles
EBay will pay $59 million settlement over pill presses sold online as US undergoes overdose epidemic
Hacked-up bodies found inside coolers aboard trucks — along with warning message from Mexican cartel