Science Scientists get adult frogs to regrow limbs - A breakthrough in regenerative medicine

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d...-possibility-regrow-human-limbs/#.W-dCz5P7S00

Millions of people live with amputated limbs that are gone forever. But that might not be the case in the future. For the first time, scientists have shown that adult frogs can regrow amputated legs. They say the approach can work in humans, too. “There is no reason that human bodies can’t regenerate,” said Tufts University biologist Michael Levin, who led the new research.

“This is the first proof-of-principle of a roadmap for regenerative therapy in human medicine, well beyond limbs,” he added. “Many problems — from birth defects to traumatic injury, aging and even cancer — could be solved if we understood how to induce organs to regrow in place.”

Regrowing Limbs

Ultimately, that’s what Levin and his research team at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, want to figure out: how cells cooperate to build a complex three-dimensional organ and “stop exactly when it’s done.” But first, the scientists needed to try to reproduce organ growth in animals that don’t regenerate. Adult African clawed frogs, a common laboratory animal known in scientific circles Xenopus laevis, fit the bill. The amphibians are not normally regenerative but have some tissue renewal capacity, just like humans.

“We were hoping to show that adult Xenopus frogs are capable of limb regeneration, and to find a trigger that allows it to happen,” Levin said.

Hormone Kick-Start

The trigger the team found is progesterone, the sex hormone involved in the female menstrual cycle, pregnancy and breastfeeding. The scientists applied the compound to frogs’ amputated back legs with a wearable bioreactor device for 24 hours. Then they watched as the limb regenerated.

Frogs that did not receive the progesterone treatment developed cartilaginous spikes at the amputation site, whereas ones that wore the hormone delivering bioreactor for one day regrew a paddle-shaped appendage. Differences between the frogs were visible within a few weeks, Levin and team revealed today in the journal Cell Reports.

Within about six months the regenerated limbs stopped growing, but the development had progressed to the point where under typical growth, fingers and toes appear. The regrown limbs had increased bone volume and density, bundles of well-organized nerve fibers and major blood vessels — all of which translated to frogs with regrown limbs that could move and swim with activity levels that were indistinguishable from frogs with intact legs.

The research shows that spurring regeneration in vertebrate animals is possible and paves the way for similar work in mammals and eventually humans.

“We may be able to induce the body to do what it does best, build complex organs,” Levin said. “The potential scope is huge.”

Could this be a step towards limb regeneration in humans?
 
Ethan Van Sciver was Right?

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A wearable bioreactor? I assume they mean they synthesize the progesterone somehow and this process is the "bioreactor" but I am probably grossly wrong.

Still, p neat.
Bioreactor is just a fancy science-word for a vessel for letting biological processes take place. I skim-read the article, it looks like they used a hydro-gel to allow the cells to swim around and rebuild the leg under the influence of the hormones, the magic part is the hormones induced the frogs to build a more complex structure.

I chopped the tip of my thumb off, just flesh, didn't get any bone, and it wasn't healing properly, the treatment for that was a hydro-gel dressing to make a little capsule of gross fluid for the cells to be able to grow out away from the wound and rebuild it properly.. you can hardly tell the end of my thumb was missing unless you look carefully.
 
The obvious based application of this would be to sneak it into a tranny's antibiotic gel/cream right after they get the chop.
 
Will they help make the frogs they turned gay straight again too?

But can they put chemicals in the water that can ungay the frogs?
Splicing frog DNA into the fractures missing from the dinosaur DNA was a major plot point in Jurassic Park(original & book); they intentionally cloned all the dinosaurs into one sex so they wouldn't naturally breed and the humans would have total control, but the frog DNA automatically recognized the homogenous environment and it caused a few to spontaneously generate the missing sex organs so that breeding could begin. Between the regeneration & sex swapping, amphibeans are pretty interesting lifeforms.
 
Splicing frog DNA into the fractures missing from the dinosaur DNA was a major plot point in Jurassic Park(original & book); they intentionally cloned all the dinosaurs into one sex so they wouldn't naturally breed and the humans would have total control, but the frog DNA automatically recognized the homogenous environment and it caused a few to spontaneously generate the missing sex organs so that breeding could begin. Between the regeneration & sex swapping, amphibeans are pretty interesting lifeforms.
All that and you didn't say "Life, uh, finds a way"? Shame.
 
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