Doctors at The Children's Hospital (Boston) have identified a mutated gene in zebrafish that increases susceptibility to epithelial cancers.

Reporting their findings in G&D, Dr Leonard Zon and his colleagues attributed the segregation of chromosomes during cell division to a mitotic checkpoint gene called separase.
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They said that mutations in separase resulted in chromosomal instability, and increased epithelial tumour load after exposure to carcinogens.
"Our work is the first evidence that separase acts as a tumour suppresser gene and further supports a role for genes that regulate genomic stability in tumour development," claimed lead author, Dr Jennifer Shepard.
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