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Manipulating mouse memory; London pollution; Nature of knowing; Snail fur

BBC Inside Science

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The Evolution of Hydroctinia

Embryonic stem cells can turn into any type of cell, multiplying and creating complex cellular and tissue structures. Most other adult creatures only have adult stem cells predestined to be blood or nerve cells - skin or bone. Hydroctinia may seem very primitive, having branched off the evolutionary tree 600 million years before us. But we humans share key aspects of the same stem cell system and the genes controlling it. In theory then, what hydroctinia can do, we can do, and other animals too, if we could just find the onswitches lost in the process of evolution. And astonishingly, that's now beginning to happen.

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