“…In the zebrafish, cardiac progenitors from both sides of the midline fuse and give rise to a luminized heart tube; the heart begins to beat at the linear tube stage, moving blood cells through this conduit, before the emergence of clearly defined heart chambers, valves, or septae (Stainier and Fishman, 1994;Trinh and Stainier, 2004). The vertebrate heart develops in the presence of mechanical and hemodynamic stimuli; thus, the question arises whether the structure of the heart influences its function, or, conversely, whether the flows and mechanical forces in the heart influence its form (Hove et al, 2003;Bartman et al, 2004;Beis et al, 2005). Although a great number of methods have been developed to understand the genetic contributions to heart formation, methods to study epigenetic contributions have been difficult to establish, mainly because of rapid motions that are involved (typically millimeters per second for distances of a few hundred microns).…”