Researchers Identify Gene Involved in Regeneration 134
v1x writes "Researchers at the University of Utah School of Medicine have discovered that when a gene called smedwi-2 is silenced in the adult stem cells of planarians, the quarter-inch long worm is unable to carry out a biological process that has mystified scientists for centuries, regeneration."
mmm. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:mmm. (Score:1)
Re:mmm. (Score:2, Funny)
This reminds me of a fantasy character in one of the many books I've read (whose name is lost on me).
There was once a goblin that had gone and eaten troll steak, and trolls are notorious for very fast regeneration. The goblin grew large and fat from having eaten the steak as it continually regenerated in his stomach and was continually being digested, but he also suffered constant pains as the steak also tried to get out.
Re:mmm. (Score:3, Funny)
"Goblin's food is bad for his elf."
Re:mmm. (Score:1)
In other news... (Score:2)
Unfortunately (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:5, Informative)
* It can activate DNA repair proteins when it recognizes damaged DNA.
* It can also hold the cell cycle at the G1/S regulation point on DNA damage recognition.
* It can initiate apoptosis, the programmed cell death, if the DNA damage proves to be irrepairable.
Basically, cancer is uncontrolled production of cells with damaged DNA with no means of stoping it or killing it off. Regeneration, if they could pull it off, would hopefully produce cells with non-damaged or non-mutated DNA.
The bobbits ;) (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The bobbits ;) (Score:1, Offtopic)
Bobbit....let's analyze this name by making some associations in combination with phonetics. What do you call a man with no arms or legs in the water? Bob! Hence something was chopped-off, amputated, or (non)surgically removed. Since Bobbit sounds a little like Hobbit, that would imply something else is missing....length, stature, and height, or even intelligence. Perhaps his genetic predispositions for sexual behavior
Re:The bobbits ;) (Score:1)
Re:The bobbits ;) (Score:2)
Quick splice me some! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Quick splice me some! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Quick splice me some! (Score:2)
Regeneration? (Score:5, Funny)
Obligatory Doctor Who reference (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Obligatory Doctor Who reference (Score:1)
The Time Lords are dead..
Long live the Time Lords!
Re:Obligatory Doctor Who reference (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory Doctor Who reference (Score:2)
Mycroft
Logic 101 (Score:5, Insightful)
That doesn't mean the gene has anything to do with it's regeneration.
If you silenced a gene in me that allowed me to produce red blood cells would you then say you had found the gene responsible for me being able to respirate (live)?
Re:Logic 101 (Score:2)
Re:Logic 101 (Score:5, Informative)
The thing to keep in mind for lay readers is that adding this gene to people won't automatically turn them into regenerating superheroes. However, indications are that understanding how this gene functions will tell us something useful about the mechanism by which stem cells are involved in regeneration, and that may have medical applications.
Re:Logic 101 (Score:1)
Are you referring to papers on time travel or something? I don't see how physicists are "sloppy about causation" anywhere else.
Re:Logic 101 (Score:1)
Re:Logic 101 (Score:1)
Re:Logic 101 (Score:1)
Re:Logic 101 (Score:1)
Other potential applications (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Other potential applications (Score:2)
Re:Other potential applications (Score:1)
Did you just suggest spraying someone with a DNA segment?
a good old conspiracy theory (Score:2, Funny)
Another de-aging + eternal youth craze? (Score:3, Insightful)
Bioweapons? (Score:1)
I know I'm quite attached to things like wounds healing themselves, how about you?
Wow.... (Score:2)
and of course, the technology and the means are probably decades away....
but yah, this might be a cool superpower to have
RB
If only... (Score:2, Funny)
illusions of you (Score:5, Insightful)
a. we don't know how this would work with the rest of the human genome
b. we have rules against testing a
c. the technology isn't complete for changing a humans dna
d. we have rules blocking a lot of research into c
e. It would be cool, so it's not going to be publicly available.
On the other hand, this is interesting research, and could help a lot in several fields of medicine, though i believe it would be mainly transplant medicine, and anything usable is still 10-20 years into the future. So get your hopes up for your kids, but realize this, you will die the same way as your grandparents.
Re:illusions of you (Score:5, Funny)
Re:illusions of you (Score:2, Funny)
Possibly needs a bit more thought, eh?
Re:illusions of you (Score:1)
Re:illusions of you (Score:1)
So I'd have to be dead and alive at the same time...
What about Schrödinger's cat?
No! Not the box!
Re:illusions of you (Score:2)
Re:illusions of you (Score:2)
Re:illusions of you (Score:2)
Re:illusions of you (Score:1)
Re:illusions of you (Score:1)
Good News (Score:5, Interesting)
I can tell you that they would all welcome a new technology that would allow people who have lost limbs to grow them back or regenerate eyes so they could see. You underestimate the the lobbying powers of Disabled Americans. We have a great deal of influence, almost as much as the AARP and the NRA, and they both have immense clout.
Congress can ignore some of us some of the time but they can't ignore all of us all the of the time. If its proven that limbs and organs can be regenerated by activating such a gene in the human genome then mark my words we'll make them make it legal.
Hmmm.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hmmm.... (Score:3, Funny)
Finding one gene alone isn't the key (Score:5, Insightful)
Finally... (Score:2, Funny)
Sweet (Score:1)
Re:Sweet (Score:2)
Oy, hey now! Keep that thing in your pants, Sparky!
RATS!!! (Score:4, Funny)
For Dnd Geeks... (Score:1)
The next press release: (Score:1)
This is simply an outbreak of the asian bird flu, the quarintine procedures will be enforced.
Great! (Score:1)
Messing with regeneration.. (Score:1)
Wolverine (Score:2, Funny)
Uh Oh! (Score:1)
Related story: Mighty Mice Regrow Organs (Score:5, Interesting)
Mice discovered accidentally at the Wistar Institute in Pennsylvania have the seemingly miraculous ability to regenerate like a salamander, and even regrow vital organs.
Researchers systematically amputated digits and damaged various organs of the mice, including the heart, liver and brain, most of which grew back.
The results stunned scientists because if such regeneration is possible in this mammal, it might also be possible in humans.
The researchers also made a remarkable second discovery: When cells from the regenerative mice were injected into normal mice, the normal mice adopted the ability to regenerate. And when the special mice bred with normal mice, their offspring inherited souped-up regeneration capabilities.
Heber-Katz discovered the strain in 1998 accidentally while working with mice specially bred for studying autoimmune diseases.
She had pierced holes in the ears of the genetically altered mice to distinguish them from a control group, but they healed quickly with no scarring.
She and her colleagues wanted to find out what other parts of this strain of mice would grow back, so they snipped off the tip of a tail, severed a spinal cord, injured the optic nerve and damaged various internal organs.
The mice seem to exhibit regenerative capabilities similar to that of human fetuses in the first trimester, said Dr. Stephen Badylak, a surgery research professor and director of the Center for Pre-Clinical Tissue Engineering at the University of Pittsburgh's McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine.
"It offers us insight into a more fetal-like healing response, where scar tissue is minimal and regeneration is abundant," Badylak said. "It's a great model to examine healing mechanisms and use that information to see if we can stimulate the same thing to happen in people."
Heber-Katz said she will soon publish her results on digit regrowth in a peer-reviewed medical journal.
In other news.... (Score:1)
Cut and paste... IT'S GENIUS! (Score:4, Funny)
You're missing the point... Cut and paste the first paragraph, then wait. After a few hours, you'll have the whole article here where we can read it.
Re:Cut and paste... IT'S GENIUS! (Score:1)
Finally, a scientific explanation of the Slashdot Dupe effect!
Re:Cut/Paste? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I for one... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:I for one... (Score:2)
I'll wait... (Score:1)
Re:I for one... (Score:5, Informative)
Now, just think of the implications of this research if we can somehow learn how this gene is regulated - no more amputations, no more diabetes type 1, no more any disease where a lost body part is gone forever!
Amazing, isn't it? I love to dream, but the reality may not turn out to be that ideal...but surely something amazing is going to result from these efforts by the Utah scientists.
Reality? (Score:4, Insightful)
Because if the regeneration ends up like lizards and amphibians (or even crustaceans), then it won't. They typically end up with a slightly smaller appendage, or sometimes even _two_. e.g. if a lizard's tail gets notched instead of totally chopped off, sometimes it ends up with two tails.
Having a nonmatching limb or extra limbs might be just as undesirable as having a missing limb.
A "freaky" limb could be perceived as "bad genes", whereas having a missing limb might not be (then again it could be a sign of genes for stupidity/carelessness though
Maybe the really rich would be able to go about their lives while getting a regen-lab to keep growing replacement limbs/organs for them under controlled conditions till they get one that matches well enough. But the poor will end up with mismatched stuff or resorting to prosthetics...
Hmm, add some rogue neurons growing in a replacement limb and you might end up with a nice B grade movie...
Re:Reality? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Reality? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Reality? (Score:2)
Re:Reality? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Reality? (Score:2)
Though if anyone comes near that part of me with anything sharp they better have a good will. I'm sure it would stand up as self defence with any male judge
Re:Reality? (Score:2)
A "freaky" limb could be perceived as "bad genes", whereas having a missing limb might not be (then again it could be a sign of genes for stupidity/carelessness though ;) ).
I can't really imagine that most people would prefer a prostetic over a fully functional but smaller limb, especially since it would eventually match. Even if the regeneration was less than perfect, surgery could correct the differences given the basic structure.
As for extra limbs, we've known how to fix that for a long time.
Re:I for one... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I for one... (Score:3, Insightful)
Quick, BUY STOCK (Score:1)
Maybe not very pleasant... (Score:2)
I'm sure you have heard certain extreme cases of malformed humans, like the "elephant man", or some guy in the guiness records who had two mouths. The latter was a case of a siamese twins where one twin's body got absorbed by the other. And we could think of it as "regeneration gone awry".
I'm not really sure if we re
Re:I for one... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: complex animal: all these scientists found is how to BREAK the mechanism. Like when I was 10, i could take a part out of the alarm clock (but then it failed completely). Until now most GMO's are single gene expressions. (double if you count in the antibiotic resistance, but no things cooperating)
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:2)
The article is where I found out, a worm sliced in two becomes two worms (I'm not too sure about that new part. How do they determine what a new worm is? Do worms have any higher level functions that are able to be used to differentiate one worm from another?). I did a quick google search and snopes search to see if the article was complete bunk and that a worm
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:1)
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:2, Funny)
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:2)
worms, because I do remember cutting a worm in half, and I'm pretty sure it died.
So while I never learnt it in science, I didn't let that stop me from performing my own experiments (although when I did it, we didn't have a science class).
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:5, Informative)
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:2)
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:More intelligent animals (Score:5, Informative)
Specifically, the maze used to train the worms were not cleaned and chemical trails were left allowing faster training of untrained worms.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_RNA [wikipedia.org]
Re:fetus (Score:2)
They've done things like splitting the ball of cells that you get before it forms into an embryo shape (google: morula, blastula), and semi-splitting it, etc. -i hope not on humans though- and well that worked out fine usually. Later, me thinks goes wrong.
Re:fetus (Score:1)
Time to start writing for a grant application for research where arms are chopped off fetuses...
Re:fetus (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe this has been used on physically abnormal but genetically fine embryos and has effectively prevented babies being born with deformities - for example, when the hand was developing misformed, it was removed and a new one grew.
But as the original poster said, it has to be done very early on. It's still experimental, and I would guess that only a small percent of the world's population have access to the hi-res ultra
Re:Utah, mormons, god... (Score:2)
The church lately has been very very good in forgiving, the previous pope has said genetic engineering is fine 8-o. He's been convinced by the Africa-needs-GMO nonsense.
Re:Utah, mormons, god... (Score:3, Interesting)
nonsense?
Africa can certainly produce enough food to feed itself with modern sustainable farming. It's problems have been mostly civil strife and partly a global economic system that makes it financially ordained that cash-crop for sale be grown, rather than a nutritionally balanced range of crops.
The first of these problems wont be fixed by GM crops and the second would be better addressed by fixing the underlying problem rather than producing, say, rice rich in vitamin D (an incomplete solution).
Re:Utah, mormons, god... (Score:2)
And ironically, mine went down shortly after posting. I've just been able to reconnect. It's a shame that the parent was modded down Offtopic though whilst I went to +3 Interesting. It might be nice if the parent had posted more than just nonsense? but there was nothing offensive in that alone. We should always question things...
especially if the pope says it's okay.
Re:Utah, mormons, god... (Score:2)
I doubt anyone else is still reading this article after all this time, so it's probably just you and me. You don't see GMO as nonsense, and that's fine with me - it wasn't my choice of words. I'm always much more specific in indentifying problems. However, for the reasons I outlined above, I think GMO crops in this context (commercial growing by African farmers) is a very bad idea. I stand by all that I said previously, but I will clarify my reasons in relation to your comments:
civil strife and monocult
How do I mod something "scary"? (Score:1)