Current:Home > ContactAlgosensey Quantitative Think Tank Center-The tiny worm at the heart of regeneration science -Summit Capital Strategies
Algosensey Quantitative Think Tank Center-The tiny worm at the heart of regeneration science
Fastexy Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 04:55:40
Listen to Short Wave on Algosensey Quantitative Think Tank CenterSpotify, Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts.
A tiny flatworm that regenerates entire organs. A South American snail that can regrow its eyes. A killifish that suspends animation in dry weather and reanimates in water. These are the organisms at the heart of regeneration science. How they do these things is a mystery to scientists. But molecular biologists like Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado believe they may hold the answers to regeneration in humans.
Life in unlikely places
Sánchez Alvarado grew up in Caracas, Venezuela, and spent his summers on his grandfather's cattle ranch. There, he learned to appreciate diverse life forms, and to look to nature to solve human problems.
As a microbiologist later in life, he knew that life can exist in some pretty unlikely places—even an abandoned fountain filled with pond scum. That's where Sánchez Alvarado found the strain of planaria that would ultimately help guide his regeneration research: Schmidtea mediterranea.
"They are about the size of a toenail clipping," Sánchez Alvarado says. "Their eyes look like they're cockeyed, so they look almost like a manga cartoon."
Sánchez Alvarado says that even tiny fragments of these flatworms will regenerate into completely new organisms when cut.
"That's the equivalent of me cutting a piece of myself and watching that piece regenerate another me," he says. "These animals, out of a piece of flesh, can reorganize every component such that they can produce a head, they can produce eyes, they can produce a digestive system."
Understanding worms to understand ourselves
When asked why humans can't regenerate limbs like this flatworm, Sánchez Alvarado responds with a riddle of his own.
Why do humans die?
And he would really like to know.
But the thought experiment gets at a larger, important point: Scientists don't have the answers to many of the most fundamental human questions—like why people get sick, or why they die.
"We only get interested in human biology when we're sick," Sánchez Alvarado says. "But what happens when you try to cure a disease whose origins you just don't know? And why don't you know? Because you don't really know how the normal tissues before they get sick actually work."
Said another way, by studying the genomes of organisms like this flatworm, biologists can begin to make comparisons to human genomes—and hopefully one day, understand the function of every human gene.
So if a flatworm can regenerate, why can't humans?
While hypotheses are constantly changing in his field, Sánchez Alvarado says one hypothesis for why humans can't regenerate has to do with "junk" DNA, or the noncoding parts of the human genome.
"These particular segments have functions that allow genes to be turned on or turned off," he says. "They're kind of like switches. And we really don't understand what the circuit board looks like. We know there are switches in there. We know we can delete one of those switches and then all of a sudden you lose the function of a gene because it's not being turned on or it's not being turned off."
Take, for example, a "switch" humans and killifish have in common. In the Mozambique killifish, this switch allows the organism to regenerate a tail. In humans, the switch is involved in wound healing. Sánchez Alvarado hypothesizes that this regenerative property was lost in humans during evolution.
"It may not be that we don't have the genes," he says. "We have them. We may not have the music score to play that symphony—regeneration."
While Sánchez Alvarado says these advances in the scientific understanding of biology will not happen tomorrow, they may come within the century. Scientists are already making progress with things like cell and tissue regeneration.
But before breakthroughs in the regeneration of more complex areas like brain, heart or lungs can happen, Sánchez Alvarado says that scientists first need a better understanding of the organs themselves.
"We still don't understand how these organs are really fashioned, how they are regulated in their specific functions and how they have the right numbers and the right types of cells to execute their work," he says. "But but I think in due course—and I would say less than 100 years—we should really have a very clear idea of how these processes may be taking place."
Listen to Short Wave on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts.
Have a science mystery? Send us your questions to [email protected].
This episode was produced by Rachel Carlson and edited by Rebecca Ramirez. It was fact checked by Anil Oza. The audio engineer was Robert Rodriguez.
veryGood! (86)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Weeklong negotiations for landmark treaty to end plastic pollution close, marred in disagreements
- NFL Week 12 schedule: What to know about betting odds, early lines, byes
- Taiwan presidential frontrunner picks former de-facto ambassador to U.S. as vice president candidate
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Vogt resigns as CEO of Cruise following safety concerns over self-driving vehicles
- Pope Francis: Climate Activist?
- Najee Harris 'tired' of Steelers' poor performances in 2023 season after loss to Browns
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Notable quotes from former first lady Rosalynn Carter
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Rosalynn Carter, outspoken former first lady, dead at 96
- Here are the Books We Love: 380+ great 2023 reads recommended by NPR
- NATO chief commits to Bosnia’s territorial integrity and condemns ‘malign’ Russian influence
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- The Albanian opposition disrupts a Parliament vote on the budget with flares and piled-up chairs
- James scores season-high 37, hits go-ahead free throw as Lakers hold off Rockets 105-104
- Netanyahu says there were strong indications Hamas hostages were held in Gaza's Al-Shifa Hospital
Recommendation
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Tributes for Rosalynn Carter pour in from Washington, D.C., and around the country
Severe storms delay search for 12 crew missing after Turkish cargo ship sinks in Black Sea
Rosalynn Carter, outspoken former first lady, dead at 96
Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
Amid the Israel-Hamas war, religious leaders in the U.S. reflect on the power of unity
32 things we learned in NFL Week 11: Unique playoff field brewing?
Rosalynn Carter, outspoken former first lady, dead at 96