Regeneration (biology)
Information about Regeneration (biology)
In biology, regeneration is an organism's ability to replace body parts. Aside from being used to generally describe any number of specific healing processes, regeneration also is a specific method of healing that is noted for its ability to regrow lost limbs, severed nerve connections, and other wounds. It can be seen in the organisms of planaria and starfish.
Regeneration of a lost limb occurs in two major steps, first de-differentiation of adult cells into a stem cell state similar to embryonic cells and second, development of these cells into new tissue more or less the same way it developed the first time [7]. Some animals like planarians instead keep clusters of non-differentiated cells within their bodies, which migrate to the parts of the body that need healing.
In spite of the historically small size of the number of researchers studying limb regeneration, remarkable progress has been made recently in establishing Ambystoma (the axolotl) as a model genetic organism. This progress has been facilitated by advances in genomics, bioinformatics, and somatic cell transgenesis in other fields, that have created the opportunity to investigate the mechanisms of important biological properties, such as limb regeneration, in the axolotl [12]. The Ambystoma Genetic Stock Center (AGSC) is a self-sustaining, breeding colony of the Mexican axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum) supported by the National Science Foundation as a Living Stock Collection. Located at the University of Kentucky, the AGSC is dedicated to supplying genetically well-characterized axolotl embryos, larvae, and adults to laboratories throughout the United States and abroad. An NIH-funded NCRR grant has led to the establishment of the Ambystoma EST database, the Salamander Genome Project (SGP) that has led to the creation of the first amphibian gene map and several annotated molecular data bases, and the creation of the research community web portal (www.ambystoma.org).
Human ribs can regenerate if the periosteum, the membrane surrounding the rib, is left intact (Nadia Rosenthal in Howard Hughes Medical Institute "The 2006 Holiday Lectures on Science"). For this reason, ribs are used as a source of bone in reconstructive surgery. [13]
By comparing the differential gene expression of scarless healing MRL mice and poor healing C57BL/6 mice strain, 36 genes have been identified that are good candidates for studying how the healing process differs in MRL mice and other mice.[1]
The regenerative abilities of MRL mice does however not protect against myocardial infarction. MRL mice show the same amount of cardiac injury and scar formation as normal mice after a heart attack.[2]
In some fictional stories, the possibility for enhanced human regeneration is explored. Comic books, especially, have featured characters with such abilities. In these stories, human healing from injury is treated as a superpower. Usually, this "healing factor", as it is called, allows for rapid regeneration from injury in a very short period of time; usually a few seconds. Even normally fatal injuries are often overcome with relative ease. While the specifics sometimes differ, the factors are often presented as an inherent ability gained through human mutation/evolution, deliberate engineering or magic.
In the Comics and films of Xmen, Wolverine has the ability of accelerated healing
In the Television Series Doctor Who, Time Lords can 'regenerate'. They become totally new people, by replacing every cell in their body, but retaining the brain, effectively making them immortal.
In the Television Series Heroes, Claire Bennet the cheerleader can 'regenerate' spontaneously.
In the Anime series DragonBall Z, the character Piccolo can regenerate any part of his body immediately.
Comic book fiction traditionally features characters with superhuman, supernatural, or paranormal abilities, often referred to as "
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Explanation
Regeneration occurs in many, if not all vertebrate types , and is present in some adult animals such as salamanders ( e.g. [1]). Mammals exhibit limited regenerative abilities, although not as impressive as salamanders. Examples of mammalian regeneration include antlers, finger tips and holes in ears. Finger tip regeneration has been well characterized, and these studies have resulted in the first demonstration of a genetic pathway controlling regeneration in a mammal. Several species of mammals can regenerate ear holes; a phenomenon that has been most studied in the MRL mouse. If the processes behind regeneration are fully understood, it is believed this would lead to better treatment for individuals with nerve injuries (such as those resulting from a broken back or a polio infection), missing limbs, and/or damaged or destroyed organs.Regeneration of a lost limb occurs in two major steps, first de-differentiation of adult cells into a stem cell state similar to embryonic cells and second, development of these cells into new tissue more or less the same way it developed the first time [7]. Some animals like planarians instead keep clusters of non-differentiated cells within their bodies, which migrate to the parts of the body that need healing.
Regeneration in salamanders
In urodele amphibians (salamanders), the regeneration process begins immediately after amputation. Limb regeneration in the axolotl and newt have been extensively studied. After amputation, the epidermis migrates to cover the stump in less than 12 hours, forming a structure called the apical epidermal cap (AEC). Over the next several days there are changes in the underlying stump tissues that result in the formation of a blastema (a mass of dedifferentiated proliferating cells). As the blastema forms, pattern formation genes – such as HoxA and HoxD – are activated as they were when the limb was formed in the embryo [8,10]. The Distal tip of the limb (the autopod, which is the hand or foot) is formed first in the blastema. The intermediate portions of the pattern are filled in during growth of the blastema by the process of intercalation [7,8]. Motor neurons, muscle, and blood vessels grow with the regenerated limb, and reestablish the connections that were present prior to amputation. The time that this entire process takes varies according to the age of the animal, ranging from about a month to around three months in the adult and then the limb becomes fully functional.In spite of the historically small size of the number of researchers studying limb regeneration, remarkable progress has been made recently in establishing Ambystoma (the axolotl) as a model genetic organism. This progress has been facilitated by advances in genomics, bioinformatics, and somatic cell transgenesis in other fields, that have created the opportunity to investigate the mechanisms of important biological properties, such as limb regeneration, in the axolotl [12]. The Ambystoma Genetic Stock Center (AGSC) is a self-sustaining, breeding colony of the Mexican axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum) supported by the National Science Foundation as a Living Stock Collection. Located at the University of Kentucky, the AGSC is dedicated to supplying genetically well-characterized axolotl embryos, larvae, and adults to laboratories throughout the United States and abroad. An NIH-funded NCRR grant has led to the establishment of the Ambystoma EST database, the Salamander Genome Project (SGP) that has led to the creation of the first amphibian gene map and several annotated molecular data bases, and the creation of the research community web portal (www.ambystoma.org).
Regeneration of human fingers
Studies in the 1970s showed that children up to the age of 10 or so who lose fingertips in accidents can regrow the tip of the digit within a month provided their wounds are not sealed up with flaps of skin -- the de facto treatment in such emergencies.[14]Regeneration of human ribs
Human ribs can regenerate if the periosteum, the membrane surrounding the rib, is left intact (Nadia Rosenthal in Howard Hughes Medical Institute "The 2006 Holiday Lectures on Science"). For this reason, ribs are used as a source of bone in reconstructive surgery. [13]
Regeneration of human liver
The human liver is one of the few glands in the body that has the ability to regenerate from as little as 25% of its tissue. This is largely due to the unipotency of hepatocytes.Regeneration in MRL mice
Adult mammals have a limited regenerative response as compared to most vertebrate embryos/larvae and adult salamanders and fish. Among adult mammals, the MRL mouse is a strain of mice that exhibits enhanced regenerative abilities, and for this reason it has been a well studied model system for mammalian regeneration. Since adult salamanders exhibit such a remarkable regenerative ability, and species of mammals, such as the MRL mouse, also have regenerative abilities, it is thought that it should be possible to enhance the innate regenerative ability of humans.By comparing the differential gene expression of scarless healing MRL mice and poor healing C57BL/6 mice strain, 36 genes have been identified that are good candidates for studying how the healing process differs in MRL mice and other mice.[1]
The regenerative abilities of MRL mice does however not protect against myocardial infarction. MRL mice show the same amount of cardiac injury and scar formation as normal mice after a heart attack.[2]
In fiction
In some fictional stories, the possibility for enhanced human regeneration is explored. Comic books, especially, have featured characters with such abilities. In these stories, human healing from injury is treated as a superpower. Usually, this "healing factor", as it is called, allows for rapid regeneration from injury in a very short period of time; usually a few seconds. Even normally fatal injuries are often overcome with relative ease. While the specifics sometimes differ, the factors are often presented as an inherent ability gained through human mutation/evolution, deliberate engineering or magic.
In the Comics and films of Xmen, Wolverine has the ability of accelerated healing
In the Television Series Doctor Who, Time Lords can 'regenerate'. They become totally new people, by replacing every cell in their body, but retaining the brain, effectively making them immortal.
In the Television Series Heroes, Claire Bennet the cheerleader can 'regenerate' spontaneously.
In the Anime series DragonBall Z, the character Piccolo can regenerate any part of his body immediately.
See also
External links
- Spallanzani's mouse: a model of restoration and regeneration
- Mice that regrow hearts in the news
- DARPA Grant Supports Research Toward Realizing Tissue Regeneration
- The Geniuses Of Regeneration in BusinessWeek, May 24, 2004
- UCI Limb Regeneration Lab
References
- Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2005 Apr 29;330(1):117-22. PMID 15781240
- Wound Repair Regen. 2005 Mar-Apr;13(2):205-8. PMID 15828946
- Tanaka EM. Cell differentiation and cell fate during urodele tail and limb regeneration. Curr Opin Genet Dev. 2003 Oct;13(5):497-501. PMID 14550415
- Nye HL, Cameron JA, Chernoff EA, Stocum DL. Regeneration of the urodele limb: a review. Dev Dyn. 2003 Feb;226(2):280-94. PMID 12557206
- Yu H, Mohan S, Masinde GL, Baylink DJ. Mapping the dominant wound healing and soft tissue regeneration QTL in MRL x CAST. Mamm Genome. 2005 Dec;16(12):918-24. PMID 16341671
- Odelberg SJ.Unraveling the molecular basis for regenerative cellular plasticity.PLoS Biol. 2004 Aug;2(8):E232. PMID 15314652
- Bryant, S.V., Endo, T. and Gardiner, D.M. Vertebrate limb regeneration and the origin of limb stem cells. Int. J. Dev. Biol. 2002 46:887-896. PMID 12455626
- Gardiner DM, Blumberg B, Komine Y, Bryant SV. Regulation of HoxA expression in developing and regenerating axolotl limbs. Development. 1995 Jun;121(6):1731-41. PMID 7600989
- Mullen LM, Bryant SV, Torok MA, Blumberg B, Gardiner DM. Nerve dependency of regeneration: the role of Distal-less and FGF signaling in amphibian limb regeneration. Development. 1996 Nov;122(11):3487-97. PMID 8951064
- Torok MA, Gardiner DM, Shubin NH, Bryant SV. Expression of HoxD genes in developing and regenerating axolotl limbs. Dev Biol. 1998 Aug 15;200(2):225-33. PMID 9705229
- Endo T, Bryant SV, Gardiner DM. A stepwise model system for limb regeneration. Dev Biol. 2004 Jun 1;270(1):135-45. PMID 15136146
- Putta S, Smith JJ, Walker JA, Rondet M, Weisrock DW, Monaghan J, Samuels AK, Kump K, King DC, Maness NJ, Habermann B, Tanaka E, Bryant SV, Gardiner DM, Parichy DM, Voss SR, From biomedicine to natural history research: EST resources for ambystomatid salamanders. BMC Genomics. 2004 Aug 13;5(1):54. PMID 15310388
- Wieland, C, Regenerating ribs. Creation. 1989 September;21(4):46-47. http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/570
- Weintraub, Arlene , The Geniuses Of Regeneration. 2004 MAY http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_21/b3884008_mz001.htm
Healing is the process by which the cells in the body regenerate and repair to reduce the size of a damaged or necrotic area. Healing incorporates both the removal of necrotic tissue (demolition), and the replacement of this tissue.
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Cellular differentiation is a concept from developmental biology describing the process by which cells acquire a "type". The morphology of a cell may change dramatically during differentiation, but the genetic material remains the same, with few exceptions.
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Stem cells are primal cells found in all multi-cellular organisms. They retain the ability to renew themselves through mitotic cell division and can differentiate into a diverse range of specialized cell types.
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Developmental Biology is the official journal of the Society for Developmental Biology. It publishes research on the mechanisms of development, differentiation, and growth in animals and plants at the molecular, cellular, and genetic levels.
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Planariidae
Planaria (family Planariidae) are common freshwater, non-parasitic flatworms of the phylum Platyhelminthes, class Turbellaria. It should be noted that the term "planaria" is most often used as a common name.
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Planaria (family Planariidae) are common freshwater, non-parasitic flatworms of the phylum Platyhelminthes, class Turbellaria. It should be noted that the term "planaria" is most often used as a common name.
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A. mexicanum
Binomial name
Ambystoma mexicanum
(Shaw, 1789)
The Axolotl (or ajolote) (Ambystoma mexicanum
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Binomial name
Ambystoma mexicanum
(Shaw, 1789)
The Axolotl (or ajolote) (Ambystoma mexicanum
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Newts are members of the Salamandridae family in which the adult form is aquatic or semi-aquatic. In some species the larva leave the water as a brightly-colored terrestrial form called an eft, returning to the water when mature and changing to adult colors.
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blastema is a mass of undifferentiated cells capable of growth and regeneration into organs or body parts. Blastemata are typically found in the early stages of an organism's development such as in embryos, and in the regeneration of tissues, organs and bone.
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A homeobox is a DNA sequence found within genes that are involved in the regulation of development (morphogenesis) of animals, fungi and plants. Genes that have a homeobox are called homeobox genes and form the homeobox gene family.
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In sciences dealing with the anatomy of animals, precise anatomical terms of location are necessary for a variety of reasons. Non-scientists often wonder why zoological and human anatomists use complex terminology to describe locations on a body, when common terms like "up",
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Location Ventral horn of the spinal cord
Function Excitatory projection (to NMJ)
Neurotransmitter ACh
Morphology Projection neuron
Presynaptic connections M1 via the Corticospinal tract
Postsynaptic connections
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Function Excitatory projection (to NMJ)
Neurotransmitter ACh
Morphology Projection neuron
Presynaptic connections M1 via the Corticospinal tract
Postsynaptic connections
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RIB can mean:
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- Rigid-hulled inflatable boat
- Romanian International Bank
- Routing Information Base
- This article is about the bones called ribs. For other meanings, see rib (disambiguation).
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Hepatocytes make up 70-80% of the cytoplasmic mass of the liver. These cells are involved in protein synthesis, protein storage and transformation of carbohydrates, synthesis of cholesterol, bile salts and phospholipids, and detoxification, modification and excretion of exogenous
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Myocardial infarction
Classification & external resources
Diagram of a myocardial infarction (2) of the tip of the anterior wall of the heart (an apical infarct
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Classification & external resources
Diagram of a myocardial infarction (2) of the tip of the anterior wall of the heart (an apical infarct
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A healing factor is a term used to describe the ability of some characters in fiction to recover from bodily injuries or disease at a superhuman rate. The term itself is most commonly applied to comic book characters in the Marvel Universe, although other quickly-regenerating
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Fiction is the telling of stories which are not entirely based upon facts. More specifically, fiction is an imaginative form of narrative, one of the four basic rhetorical modes.
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A comic book is a magazine or book containing sequential art in the form of a narrative. Comic books are often called comics for short. Although the term implies otherwise, the subject matter in comic books is not necessarily humorous, and in fact it is often serious and
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- Note: This is a list of powers/abilities, not a list of superheroes by their power/ability.
Comic book fiction traditionally features characters with superhuman, supernatural, or paranormal abilities, often referred to as "
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A healing factor is a term used to describe the ability of some characters in fiction to recover from bodily injuries or disease at a superhuman rate. The term itself is most commonly applied to comic book characters in the Marvel Universe, although other quickly-regenerating
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X-Men are a team of science fictional comic book characters, superheroes in the Marvel Universe. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, they debuted in The X-Men #1, published in September 1963.
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Gulo
Pallas, 1780
Species: G. gulo
Binomial name
Gulo gulo
(Linnaeus, 1758)
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Pallas, 1780
Species: G. gulo
Binomial name
Gulo gulo
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Wolverine range
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Various Doctors
(currently David Tennant)
Various companions
Opening theme Doctor Who theme music
Ending theme Doctor Who theme music (reprise)
Country of origin United Kingdom
No.
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(currently David Tennant)
Various companions
Opening theme Doctor Who theme music
Ending theme Doctor Who theme music (reprise)
Country of origin United Kingdom
No.
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Time Lords are a fictional alien race portrayed in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, of which that series' main character, the Doctor, is a member.
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Adoptive parents:
Siblings Lyle Bennet (adoptive brother), Simon and Monty Petrelli (biological half-brothers)
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- Sandra Bennet
- Noah Bennet
- Meredith Gordon
- Nathan Petrelli
Siblings Lyle Bennet (adoptive brother), Simon and Monty Petrelli (biological half-brothers)
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Dragon Ball Z (ドラゴンボールZ
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The Body Electric: Electromagnetism and the Foundation of Life
Author Robert Becker and Gary Selden
Language English
Publisher Harper Paperbacks
Publication date August 5, 1998 (paperback)
Media type Paperback
Pages 368
ISBN ISBN 0-688-06971-1
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Author Robert Becker and Gary Selden
Language English
Publisher Harper Paperbacks
Publication date August 5, 1998 (paperback)
Media type Paperback
Pages 368
ISBN ISBN 0-688-06971-1
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BusinessWeek
Type Weekly Business Periodical
Format Magazine
Owner McGraw-Hill
Editor John Byrne
Editor-in-Chief Stephen J. Adler
Founded 1929
Language English
Price USD $4.99
Headquarters New York City
Circulation 4.
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Type Weekly Business Periodical
Format Magazine
Owner McGraw-Hill
Editor John Byrne
Editor-in-Chief Stephen J. Adler
Founded 1929
Language English
Price USD $4.99
Headquarters New York City
Circulation 4.
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