View Full Version : Make your own organs


S.A.M.
04-26-07, 08:06 AM
Findings described in a new study by Stanford scientists may be the first step toward a major revolution in human regenerative medicine—a future where advanced organ damage can be repaired by the body itself. In the May 2007 issue of The FASEB Journal, researchers show that a human evolutionary ancestor, the sea squirt, can correct abnormalities over a series of generations, suggesting that a similar regenerative process might be possible in people.

Missing limbs, scarred hearts, broken spines, and wounded muscles always try to repair themselves, but often the result is invalidism or disease. Even some tumors try to revert to normal, but are unsuccessful. If the genetic sequence described in the sea squirt applies to humans, this study represents a major step for regenerative medicine.

The sea squirt is more closely related to humans than many would expect. It may appear similar to a sea sponge, worm, or plant, but it is actually not closely related to any of these organisms. Sea squirt larvae have primitive spinal cords, distinguishing them in the greater chain of life and on the evolutionary ladder. Specifically, sea squirts, like humans, belong to a group of animals called chordates (organisms with some level of spinal cord development), and many scientists believe that sea squirts approximate what the very first human chordate ancestor may have been like 550 million years ago. By studying this modern day representative of our evolutionary ancestor, researchers are able to identify fundamental principles of complex processes, such as healing and organ regeneration, on which new treatments are based.

http://www.physorg.com/news96629365.html

dexter
04-27-07, 05:18 AM
I agree, they are closer relatives to plants, prokaryotes and fungi.

But, Their regenerative abilities are probobly not a whole lot compatable with human physiology. REMEMBER: Lizards are vertabrates, and yet they still retain regenerative abilities. Maybe isolating and determination of the genes related between these too genus' might prove to be usefull, but such research has yet to be conclusive on such a breakthrough. We would have more luck with cloning organs.

John99
04-27-07, 05:34 AM
It is interesting that humans are in this group:

http://tolweb.org/Chordata/2499


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunicate

Lost limbs:
http://www.downbelow.co.uk/sitefiles/pages/octopus.html

Fish sex:
http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/sn_edpik/ls_4.htm

this is cool: What's more, studies suggest that a few species of fish living in and around coral reefs reverse gender as many as 10 times.