University of Utah researchers-feeding microscopic pills of RNA to quarter-inch long worms called planarians-have
identified many genes essential to understanding a biological mystery that has captivated scientists for hundreds of years:
regeneration.
In pinpointing the genes, the U School of Medicine researchers have established the planarian as a genetically sound model
for human biology, to take its place alongside Drosophila (fruit flies), C.elegans (another worm), zebrafish, and mice.
The study, to be published in the May issue of Developmental Cell, employed the first large-scale use of RNA interference
(RNAi) to silence planarian genes to identify their role in the worm's biology, according to Alejandro S?nchez Alvarado,
Ph.D., principal investigator and U medical school associate professor of neurobiology and anatomy. The U team's work shows
that planarian genes can be selectively manipulated to study some of the most basic and important areas of biological
research: stem cells, homeostasis (tissue loss and replacement), regeneration, and disease.
"Planarian biology has much in common to the biology that you and I share," said S?nchez Alvarado, who last month was
appointed a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. "This work opens a whole new window to study aspects of human
biology that are barely accessible today."
The planarians used in these studies, also called flatworms, live in fresh water and have a singular ability to regenerate.
Chop one in half, and two new worms grow. Their ability to regenerate is so prolific that a tissue fragment only 1/279th of
the worm's length can grow into a new planarian. Researchers know that planarian stem cells, called neoblasts, play a central
role in both regeneration and homeostasis. But how they do that has remained shrouded in mystery.
S?nchez Alvarado and his research associates used bacteria to synthesize double-stranded RNA that silences planarian genes.
The bacteria effectively become tiny pills-five to 10 microns across-that now can be mixed into planarian food. When S?nchez
Alvarado and his associates fed the worms dinner, the RNA diffused throughout their bodies.
S?nchez Alvarado and Helen Hay Whitney Foundation postdoctoral fellow Peter W. Reddien, Ph.D., silenced and screened 1,065
planarian genes with RNAi. Specific defects were associated with 240 of the genes that were silenced. About 85 percent (204)
of the 240 genes are shared by the genomes of other species, including humans, according to S?nchez Alvarado.
The researchers found that 145 of the silenced genes affect both regeneration and tissue loss and replacement. Some of the
genes were essential to homeostasis, but not regeneration, and 35 genes were found to be essential to regeneration, but not
homeostasis.
"This tells us that separate genetic pathways for regeneration and homeostasis must exist," S?nchez Alvarado said. "It's a
huge step forward for us and opens the possibility of systematic molecular studies to find the genetic cause of regenerative
processes in animals."
Silencing planarian genes may also help in studying human disease. Thirty-eight of the genes S?nchez Alvarado and his team
silenced are related to human genes associated with diseases, such as ataxia (inability to coordinate muscular movements),
bradyopsia (slow vision), and cancer. Only eight of those genes have a corresponding knockout gene in mice. This means
researchers may be able to use planarians to learn about human diseases that can't be studied in other animal models.
Another 35 of the silenced genes may shed light on the parasitic platyhelminthes, such as Schitosoma mansoni, which cause
disease in millions of people. The genes identified by the U researchers may be required for the survival of the parasites.
"Considering such pathogens are estimated to cause disease in nearly 300 million people throughout the world, these genes
might make attractive drug targets," S?nchez Alvarado and his fellow researchers wrote in the study.
The planarian makes an ideal biological model for three important reasons, according to S?nchez Alvarado.
-- It is amenable to genetic manipulation.
-- It is an extremely simple organism with little redundancy in its genes, meaning it has fewer genes to carry out specific
functions. This makes it easier to identify a gene's function by silencing it and will help how researchers target their
efforts on equivalent genes in mice or zebrafish, for example.
-- It is inexpensive to study.
Now that S?nchez Alvarado and his colleagues have opened the door to understanding regeneration by identifying key genes in
the process, the U researcher predicts, with aid of the planarian, more discoveries are on the way.
"Our limitations right now are how many experiments we can do in a day," he said. "The mystery of what makes regeneration
possible, particularly in these animals, is on its way to finally being resolved."
Other authors of the study include Peter W. Reddien, Ph.D, Helen Hay Whitney Foundation postdoctoral fellow, Kenneth J.
Murfitt, and Joya R. Jennings, all of the University of Utah Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy in the School of
Medicine; and Adam L. Bermange, currently at the London Research Institute.
This news release and a downloadable, high-resolution photograph will be available at this Web site at noon (EST) on Monday,
May 2. utah.edu/unews/releases/05/may/planaria.html
Contact: Phil Sahm, Office of Public Affairs
Phil.Sahmhsc.utah.edu
801-581-2517
University of Utah Health Sciences Center
uuhsc.utah.edu
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