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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
April
Study
of planarians offers insight into germ cell development
Diana Yates,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; diya@uiuc.edu
Released
4/23/07
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Phillip
Newmark, a professor of cell and developmental biology,
and graduate student Yuying Wang report that planaria
– the seemingly cross-eyed flatworms – share
some important characteristics with mammals that
may help scientists tease out the mechanisms by which
germ cells are formed and maintained. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
The planarian is not as well known as other, more widely used subjects
of scientific study – model creatures such as the fruit fly,
nematode or mouse. But University of Illinois cell
and developmental biology professor Phillip Newmark thinks
it should be. As it turns out, the tiny, seemingly cross-eyed
flatworm is an ideal subject for the study of germ cells, precursors
of eggs and sperm in all sexually reproducing species.
The planarian Newmark studies, Schmidtea mediterranea, is a tiny creature
with a lot of interesting traits. Cut it in two (lengthwise or crosswise)
and each piece will regenerate a new planarian, complete with brains,
guts and – in most cases – gonads. Even when the planarian’s
brain is severed from its body, it can regenerate all that is removed,
including the reproductive organs.
In a new study published this month in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, Newmark and his colleagues at the U. of I. report
that planarians share some important characteristics with mammals that
may help scientists tease out the mechanisms by which germ cells are
formed and maintained. Newmark’s team made a few discoveries related
to a gene, called nanos, which was previously known to play a critical
role in germ cell development in several other model organisms.
Unlike fruit flies and nematodes, which show signs of germ cell initiation
in the earliest stages of their embryonic development, planarians do
not generally express nanos or produce germ cells until several days
after hatching. This delayed initiation of germ cell growth is called
inductive specification, and is common to mammals and a number of other
animals.
Graduate student Yuying Wang and the other team members were able to
show that nanos is essential for inductive specification in planarians.
Blocking nanos expression by means of RNA interference immediately after
the planarians hatched prevented the emergence and development of germ
cells. Blocking nanos in mature adults caused their ovaries and testes
to disappear. And when the researchers blocked nanos expression in planarians
that had had their bodies and reproductive organs detached from their
brains, the planarians regenerated new bodies, but with no reproductive
cells.
“This is the first time that nanos gene function has been studied
in a non-traditional model organism,” Newmark said. “This
is important because planarians, like mammals, seem to make their germ
cells by an inductive mechanism. So we’re hoping that we can use
the molecular biological tools available for studying planarians to
get at the mechanisms that tell a cell: ‘You’re going to
be a germ cell.’ ”
S. mediterranea also has the ability to reproduce asexually: It clones
itself by means of fission. In looking at nanos in asexual individuals
of this species, the researchers made the surprising discovery that
these asexual individuals also express nanos and produce germ cells.
Some other mechanism, as yet unknown, prevents these germ cells from
developing into functional testes and ovaries.
“Having a simple organism that also uses inductive signaling is
going to help us tease apart the more conserved mechanisms (of germ
cell development and maintenance),” Newmark said. “We hope
that this information will also prove informative for understanding
these processes in higher organisms.”
Editor’s note: To reach Phillip Newmark,
call 217-244-4674; e-mail: pnewmark@uiuc.edu.
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