Frog is an interesting system because as a tadpole, they can re grow limb limbs. But then this ability is dramatically lost pon a metamorphosis. So now the question is, how can we make them more perfect and stronger? The first example that you know of of a limb regeneration, other than species that do it automatically, that you know, that you coaxed them along to doing it? No. It's not clear yet.
Biological organisms are pretty good at healing themselves, but their abilities fall short in crucial ways. Planaria can be cut into pieces, and each piece will regrow into an entire organism; but for most advanced animals, loss of a limb becomes a permanent condition. But why should that necessarily be so, if an organism’s genome knows what it’s supposed to look like? Lea Goentoro’s lab has recently produced surprising results that indicate that it’s easier than you might think to coax animals into regenerating limbs.
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Lea Goentoro received her Ph.D. in chemical engineering from Princeton University. She is currently Professor of Biology at Caltech. Her research involves how biological systems function and develop across a variety of scales, including perception, organization, and self-repair.
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