“The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt...

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“The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Transcript of “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt...

Page 1: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

“The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Page 2: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Evolution of Regeneration

What explains the distribution of regeneration among organisms?

- Adaptive?- Ancestral to all metazoans and repeatedly lost, or independently derived?

Evolution and Development

Page 3: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Regeneration is Phylogenetically Widespread

Anuran Tail Planeria

Page 4: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.
Page 5: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.
Page 6: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Regeneration: Adaptive?

• Seemingly, the ability to regenerate should benefit individuals of a population (i.e. is adaptive).

• Can you think of a way to test the idea that regeneration is adaptive?

Page 7: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Hermit Crabs regenerate their anteriorand posterior limbs. However, the frequencyof regeneration is much higher for anteriorlegs (83% vs 21%).

From Morgan 1898 and Needham 1961

Page 8: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Regeneration: Ancestral?

• Much of what is accomplished during regeneration is first accomplished during

embryonic development (same mechanisms are deployed).

• Can you think of a way to test the idea that regeneration is inherent?

Page 9: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Observations Supporting the Idea that Regeneration is Ancestral

• Phylogenetically widespread• Lost between closely related species• Aspects of regeneration are similar among

organisms in a developmental sense• Some organisms that can not regenerate

body parts, do so partially during development.

Page 10: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Epimorphic Regeneration: The Blastema is Very Similar Among Unrelated Taxa

Page 11: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Regulation andEvolution of EpimorphicRegeneration

Page 12: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

• Loss of regeneration may reflect major evolutionary changes:

– With respect to amniote vertebrates:• Water to land transition• Poikilothermy to homothermy• Loss of metamorphosis• Evolution of immune system

Why Not Regeneration?Why don’t we observe it more?

Page 13: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

However, there is variation among amphibians

• Can regenerate limbs as immature larvae

• Loses ability to regenerate at metamorphosis

• Adults regenerate a cartilagenous spike after limb amputation.• Is the generation of a spike an

adaptation?

Unlike salamanders, Xenopus has limited regenerative potential

Page 14: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

100% regenerate spikeafter radia-ulna amputation

80% regenerate spikeafter humerous amputation

0% regenerate spikeafter complete amputation

Page 15: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

Growth Rates

No legs amputated0.55 9.54 10.2

1 leg amputated 0.54 9.0 9.54

2 legs amputated 0.53 7.5 8.8

Day 0 1 month 4 months

* Weights are in grams

Page 16: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

The spike supportsnuptial pad tissue development in males.

Page 17: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

2 of 3 males with1 regenerated

radia-ulna spike were able to successfully

amplex and matewith a female.

Page 18: “The regenerative process is one of the fundamental attributes of living things...” Thomas Hunt Morgan (1901), from his book Regeneration.

• The results suggest that spike regeneration maybe adaptive.

• But why did Xenopus frogs presumably loose the ability to reform perfect limbs?