It's a miracle: mice regrow hearts

polster

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This could potentially lead to treatments or cures for hairloss and other malities for humans.

It's a miracle: mice regrow hearts
August 29, 2005

SCIENTISTS have created "miracle mice" that can regenerate amputated limbs or damaged vital organs, making them able to recover from injuries that would kill or permanently disable normal animals.

The experimental animals are unique among mammals in their ability to regrow their heart, toes, joints and tail.

And when cells from the test mouse are injected into ordinary mice, they too acquire the ability to regenerate, the US-based researchers say.

Their discoveries raise the prospect that humans could one day be given the ability to regenerate lost or damaged organs, opening up a new era in medicine.

Details of the research will be presented next week at a scientific conference on ageing titled Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence, at Cambridge University in Britain.

The research leader, Ellen Heber-Katz, professor of immunology at the Wistar Institute, a US biomedical research centre, said the ability of the mice at her laboratory to regenerate organs appeared to be controlled by about a dozen genes.

Professor Heber-Katz says she is still researching the genes' exact functions, but it seems almost certain humans have comparable genes.

"We have experimented with amputating or damaging several different organs, such as the heart, toes, tail and ears, and just watched them regrow," she said.

"It is quite remarkable. The only organ that did not grow back was the brain.

"When we injected fetal liver cells taken from those animals into ordinary mice, they too gained the power of regeneration. We found this persisted even six months after the injection."

Professor Heber-Katz made her discovery when she noticed the identification holes that scientists punch in the ears of experimental mice healed without any signs of scarring in the animals at her laboratory.

The self-healing mice, from a strain known as MRL, were then subjected to a series of surgical procedures. In one case the mice had their toes amputated -- but the digits grew back, complete with joints.

In another test some of the tail was cut off, and this also regenerated. Then the researchers used a cryoprobe to freeze parts of the animals' hearts, and watched them grow back again. A similar phenomenon was observed when the optic nerve was severed and the liver partially destroyed.

The researchers believe the same genes could confer greater longevity and are measuring their animals' survival rate. However, the mice are only 18 months old, and the normal lifespan is two years so it is too early to reach firm conclusions.

Scientists have long known that less complex creatures have an impressive ability to regenerate. Many fish and amphibians can regrow internal organs or even whole limbs.

Source: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/co ... 17,00.html
 

polster

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sublime said:
I do not mean to be insensitive but let's just look at the number of people who need new hearts and the number of people who suffer from hair loss. These doctors are wasting their time with this $#iT, you break out the hamsters and the flanks or you pack up your $#iT and go home.

losing your hair is not life threatening to your health other than the social issues. A bad heart is a different story.
 

oni

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polster we really do not know what causes hairloss sooooo who knows what else it could be linked to in our genes?
 

oni

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polster when they shaved all the mice hair off did it grow back? :lol:

lol does it say how long these "special" strain of mice live for? and do these amazing regenerative powers give rise to amazing forms of cancer? that you cannot stop.

My point is polster, they can f*** about with mice but they are not humans. :roll:
 

oni

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How about if you don't like the way your c*** looks just cut it off!
 

oni

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How about three c****, one for each hole and one just for show.
 
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