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SALAMANDERS, REGENERATIVE WONDERS, HEAL LIKE MAMMALS, PEOPLE
physorg.com
July 1st, 2009
http://www.physorg.com/news165674643.html
The salamander is a superhero of regeneration, able to replace lost limbs,
damaged lungs, sliced spinal cord -- even bits of lopped-off brain. But it
turns out that remarkable ability isn't so mysterious after all --
suggesting that researchers could learn how to replicate it in people.
Scientists had long credited the diminutive amphibious creature's outsized
capabilities to "pluripotent" cells that, like human embryonic stem cells,
have the uncanny ability to morph into whatever appendage, organ or tissue
happens to be needed or due for a replacement.
But in a paper set to appear Thursday in the journal Nature, a team of seven
researchers, including a University of Florida zoologist, debunks that
notion. Based on experiments on genetically modified axolotl salamanders,
the researchers show that cells from the salamander's different tissues
retain the "memory" of those tissues when they regenerate, contributing with
few exceptions only to the same type of tissue from whence they came.
Standard mammal stem cells operate the same way, albeit with far less
dramatic results -- they can heal wounds or knit bone together, but not
regenerate a limb or rebuild a spinal cord. What's exciting about the new
findings is they suggest that harnessing the salamander's regenerative
wonders is at least within the realm of possibility for human medical
science.
"I think it's more mammal-like than was ever expected," said Malcolm Maden,
a professor of biology, member of the UF Genetics Institute, and author of
the paper. "It gives you more hope for being able to someday regenerate
individual tissues in people."
Also, the salamanders heal perfectly, without any scars whatsoever, another
ability people would like to learn how to mimic, Maden said.
Axolotl salamanders, originally native to only one lake in central Mexico,
are evolutionary oddities that become sexually reproducing adults while
still in their larval stage. They are useful scientific models for studying
regeneration because, unlike other salamanders, they can be bred in
captivity and have large embryos that are easy to work on.
When an axolotl loses, for example, a leg, a small bump forms over the
injury called a blastema. It takes only about three weeks for this blastema
to transform into a new, fully functioning replacement leg -- not long
considering the animals can live 12 or more years.
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Published by David Sunfellow
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