How do animals regrow their limbs? And why can't humans do it? - Jessica Whited

478,083 views ・ 2024-09-10

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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For some animals, losing a limb is a decidedly permanent affair.
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But for salamanders, particularly axolotls,
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amputation is just a temporary affliction.
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Not only can they grow back entire limbs in as little as six weeks,
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they can also regenerate heart and even brain tissue.
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So how does this astonishing adaptation work?
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Regardless of regeneration,
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every limbed creature had to grow their arms and legs at some point.
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And whether that process starts in the womb or the world,
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it almost always begins with little bumps called limb buds.
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These buds are full of progenitor cells—
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a cornucopia of cell types that can differentiate into various tissues,
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including muscles, cartilage, ligaments, and tendons.
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Some of these progenitors are stem cells,
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capable of developing into a range of specialized cells and tissues,
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while others are merely derived from stem cells.
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But in either case, the progenitors differentiate and multiply rapidly
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as the limb bud develops.
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Nerves grow into the limb from nearby cell bodies
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and a network of blood vessels form which fuel the process with oxygen.
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Eventually, that tiny bud grows into a full infant limb.
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Most salamanders, including axolotls, develop their limbs in the same way.
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But unlike other animals, they can also start this process all over again
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if they need to.
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When salamanders lose a limb,
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surrounding skin cells quickly surge across the wound’s surface.
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This new layer of skin is called the wound epidermis,
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and once established, it signals cells in the underlying limb stump
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to undergo something called dedifferentiation.
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This process reverts nearby cells from fully developed limb tissues
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back into earlier, less specialized progenitor cells.
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At the same time, the peripheral nervous system fires up stem cells
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throughout the salamander’s body.
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This would be impossible for most multicellular organisms,
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whose stem cells typically lose their regenerative capacity with age.
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But when salamander stem cells near the injury get the right signal,
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they reactivate and start multiplying.
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Researchers don’t know what ratio of stem cells
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and dedifferentiated progenitor cells regeneration requires.
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But we do know these cells come together
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to form the most important part of the process: the blastema.
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This structure is almost identical to a limb bud—
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the primary difference is that it’s made of recycled, repurposed cells,
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and potentially reserved cells, rather than completely new ones.
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Beyond that, blastemas and limb buds have the same mission:
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to make thousands of new cells and organize them
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into the muscle, bone, skin, and nerve tissue
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required for a functional limb.
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As this process unfolds, nerves and blood vessels spanning the injury site
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transmit nutrition and oxygen.
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Over several weeks, the stump will steadily grow
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a miniature limb with translucent skin.
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And when the process is complete,
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not only will the limb match the rest of the salamander,
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there won't even be a scar.
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The relationship between scarring and regeneration
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is just one of this processes’ many mysteries.
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Scientists are still tracking salamander cells on the molecular level
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to determine how they revert from a mature stage into a regenerative one.
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And research into transplanting blastema cells investigates
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how other animals might replicate this reconstructive wizardry.
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We also don’t understand how salamanders’ bodies know
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what part of the limb has been lost or how much needs to be regrown.
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One theory is that blastema cells have a form of positional memory,
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allowing them to determine how much to grow in relation to one another.
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And it’s equally important to understand how these limbs know when to stop growing
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to prevent overdevelopment, like in cancerous tumors.
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But one of regenerations essential ingredients doesn’t belong solely
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to salamanders: the blastema.
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Deer antlers use a similar healing tissue to regenerate each year,
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even though their skin scars like ours.
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Spiny mice can also restore skin, hair, and some other appendages scar-free.
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And even humans can regenerate the tips of our fingers and toes
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in a surprisingly similar manner.
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We still don’t know whether this ability is tied
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to our shared ancestry with salamanders
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or fueled by distinct biological mechanisms.
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But with time and research,
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who knows what evolutionary knowledge we might grow back.
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