Date: February 8, 2017
Source: Cell Press
Few animals can match the humble
hydra's resilience. The small, tentacled freshwater animals can be literally
shredded into pieces and regrow into healthy animals. A study published
February 7 in Cell Reports suggests that pieces of hydras have structural
memory that helps them shape their new body plan according to the pattern
inherited by the animal's "skeleton." Previously, scientists thought
that only chemical signals told a hydra where its heads and/or feet should
form.
Regenerating hydras use a network
of tough, stringy protein fibers, called the cytoskeleton, to align their
cells. When pieces are cut or torn from hydras, the cytoskeletal pattern
survives and becomes part of the new animal. The pattern generates a small but
potent amount of mechanical force that shows cells where to line up. This
mechanical force can serve as a form of "memory" that stores
information about the layout of animal bodies. "You have to think of it as
part of the process of defining the pattern and not just an outcome," says
senior author, biophysicist Kinneret Keren of the Technion- Israel Institute of
Technology.
When pieces of hydra begin the
regeneration process, the scraps of hydra fold into little balls, and the
cytoskeleton has to find a balance between maintaining its old shape and
adapting to the new conditions. "If you take a strip or a square fragment
and turn it into a sphere, the fibers have to change or stretch a lot to do
that," explains Keren. However, some portions retain their pattern. As the
little hydra tissue ball stretches into a tube and grows a tentacle-ringed
mouth, the new body parts follow the template set by the cytoskeleton in
fragments from the original hydra.
The main cytoskeletal structure
in adult hydra is an array of aligned fibers that span the entire organism.
Tampering with the cytoskeleton is enough to disrupt the formation of new
hydras, the researchers found. In many ways, the cytoskeleton is like a system
of taut wires that helps the hydra keep its shape and function. In one
experiment, the researchers cut the original hydra into rings which folded into
balls that contained multiple domains of aligned fibers. Those ring-shaped
pieces grew into two-headed hydras. However, anchoring the hydra rings to stiff
wires resulted in healthy one-headed hydras, suggesting that mechanical
feedbacks promote order in the developing animal.
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