New insight into tissue regenerative potential in mammals

Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
Tissue regeneration is not known to occur in mammals. Instead, we have evolved repair mechanisms that aim to rebuild damaged structures to near-original states. Though this strategy is more cost effective with regard to cellular energy and time, it does not provide the plasticity required to fully regenerate loss appendages (e.g. Luke's hand) or organs. People have been studying regeneration for decades and have relied predominantly on non-mammalian models such as crustaceans, amphibians, and insects, all of which show remarkable capacities for regeneration. Recently, a group at the University of Florida reported the first known case of complete regeneration within a mammal that undergoes autotomy - otherwise known as “self amputation”. Their findings underscore the important yet unknown role of the highly conserved regenerative structure known as the “blastema” and pose several exciting questions regarding tissue regenerative potential in mammals.

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