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Flat worms in hogs
Flat worms in hogs





flat worms in hogs

She explains the significance of the research in the university press release, saying, “We've demonstrated that the electrical connections between cells provide important information for species-specific patterning of the head during regeneration in planarian flatworms,” she says. Tufts undergraduate Maya Emmons-Bell, a senior majoring in biology, was the first author on the paper. Still, they are convinced that the implications their research has for regenerative medicine are significant. The researchers conceded that more study into this ability is required, as the worms with alternate heads regained their proper heads after a few weeks. Given enough time and testing, the researchers hope that the discovery could lead to treatments for birth defects as well as regeneration techniques for damaged or lost body parts in human patients (though such trials are, admittedly, rather far off).

flat worms in hogs

This finding shows that head shape in flatworms can be influenced by manipulating electric synapses in the body. Their work shows that information outside of a genomic sequence can contribute significantly to an organism’s anatomy. Ultimately, it has always been thought that chromosomes determined the shape of an organism, but these results show that a species’ anatomy is not set in stone and can be overridden.

flat worms in hogs

And as previously mentioned, the changes were not limited only to head shape brain shape was also altered as was the distribution of the worm’s adult stem cells. By interrupting the electric signals that pass back and forth between cells, they were able to induce the development of heads belonging to planarians of other species. In this particular study, researchers used Girardia dorotocephala, a species of free-living planaria that have this remarkable regenerative capacity. For years, scientists have been studying this feature in order to see if it could viably be used in the medical treatment of human patients. It has long been known that flatworms have a remarkable regeneration ability. The findings are detailed in the cover story of the November 2015 edition of the International Journal of Molecular Sciences.







Flat worms in hogs