5) The African turquoise killifish – a new model for aging and 'suspended animation'

1. Valenzano DR, Kirschner J, Kamber RA, Zhang E, Weber D, Cellerino A, Englert C, Platzer M, Reichwald K and Brunet A (2009) Mapping loci associated with tail color and sex determination in the short-lived fish Nothobranchius furzeri. Genetics, 183: 1385-1395. Abstract PDF

2. Valenzano DR, Sharp S and Brunet A (2011) Transposon-mediated transgenesis in the short-lived African killifish Nothobranchius furzeri, a vertebrate model for aging. G3, Genes Genome Genetics, 1: 531-538. PDF

3. Harel I, Benayoun BA, Machado M, Singh PP, Hu CK, Pech MF, Valenzano DR, Zhang E, Sharp SC, Artandi SE and Brunet A (2015) A Platform for rapid exploration of aging and diseases in a naturally short-lived vertebrate. Cell, 160: 1013-1026. Abstract  PDF

4. Valenzano DR, Benayoun BA, Singh PP, Zhang E, Etter PD, Hu CK, Clément-Ziza M, Willemsen D, Cui R, Harel I, Machado BE, Yee MC, Sharp SC, Bustamante CD, Beyer A, Johnson EA, and Brunet A  (2015) The African turquoise killifish genome provides insights into evolution and genetic architecture of lifespan. Cell, 163: 1539-1554. Abstract PDF African Killifish Genome Browser

5. Harel I, Valenzano DR, and Brunet A (2016) Efficient genome engineering approaches for the short-lived African turquoise killifish. Nature Protocols, 11: 2010-2028. Abstract PDF

6. Hu C-K and Brunet A (2018) The African turquoise killifish: A research organism to study vertebrate aging and diapause. Aging Cell, 17: e12757. Abstract PDF

7. Singh PP*, Demmitt BA*, Nath RD*, and Brunet A (2019) The genetics of aging: a vertebrate perspective. Cell, 177: 200-220. Abstract PDF