Parabiosis is a technique that involves surgically joining two living organisms such that they share a circulatory system. In 1959, G. R. Hervey utilized parabiosis to study the role of the brain’s hypothalamus in obesity. Hervey combined pairs of rats in which one rat had a surgical lesion in the hypothalamus and the other rat was healthy. Hervey noticed that the lesioned rat became obese and experienced significant weight gain and excessive hunger, while the healthy rat experienced weight loss and decreased appetite. The results suggested that there exists a feedback control system in the hypothalamus involving physiological signals that are released in order to suppress appetite. The healthy rat had decreased its eating in response to the signals in the blood from the lesioned rat whose feedback control system was impaired. In addition to obesity, parabiotic experiments have been used to study age-related chronic diseases (e.g. Alzheimer’s and osteoarthritis), stem cells, tissue regeneration, diabetes, and cancer among others.
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