In one tank at the zebrafish facility at Harvard's Cardiovascular Research Center, fish just under three weeks old dart around like small slits in the water, each barely the length of a newborn human's fingernail. Hundreds of other tanks, most containing a transgenic or mutant line, fill the room. Next door in the main lab, Randall Peterson, whose group shares the facility with four others, pulls a Petri dish containing a 48-hour-old fish out of an incubator. Under a microscope, it is completely translucent, its eyes and heart well formed, blood pumping vigorously and tail extending straight back like an arrow. A fluorescent transgene selectively labels the organism's myocytes, outlining the two chambers of its heart with red and enabling Peterson to monitor the effects of different chemicals on the heart.













