All posts tagged: Salamander

Salamander gene could hold the key to regrowing human limbs

Salamander gene could hold the key to regrowing human limbs

The skin over a fresh wound might not look like much. In some animals, though, that thin covering becomes command central for rebuilding what was lost. That idea sits at the heart of new research on axolotls, zebrafish, and mice, three species that are very different on the surface but share part of the same genetic machinery when they regenerate damaged body parts. By tracing that overlap, scientists say they have found an early clue toward a gene therapy strategy that might someday help people regrow complex tissues after injury. “This significant research brought together three labs, working across three organisms to compare regeneration,” said Josh Currie, an assistant professor of biology at Wake Forest whose lab studies the Mexican axolotl salamander. “It showed us that there are universal, unifying genetic programs that are driving regeneration in very different types of organisms, salamanders, zebrafish and mice.” The work brought together Currie, Duke University plastic surgeon David A. Brown, and Kenneth D. Poss of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Their shared target was limb and appendage regeneration, …

Bizarro salamander ancestor was an evolutionary oddball

Bizarro salamander ancestor was an evolutionary oddball

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. There are quite a few animals considered “living fossils” in today’s world. Once thought extinct, the prehistoric coelacanth has continuously swam through Earth’s oceans since the time of the dinosaurs. Horseshoe crabs exist in fossil records dating back hundreds of millions of years. Even many sharks look virtually unchanged from their Cretaceous Era ancestors. But although Tanyka amnicola was last seen about 275 million years ago, it was already a living fossil in its own time. It was also an extremely strange creature. So strange, in fact, that paleontologists initially thought they were looking at an ancient aberration when they discovered the first jawbone of this salamander-esque creature in a dry riverbed near the Amazon rainforest in Brazil. A Tanyka jawbone, with rock hammer for scale, found in the Brazil. Credit: Ken Angielczyk / Field Museum “The jaw has this weird twist that drove us crazy trying to figure it out. We were scratching our heads over this for …

250-million-year-old Australian ‘sea-salamander’ sheds new light on the dawn of the dinosaurs

250-million-year-old Australian ‘sea-salamander’ sheds new light on the dawn of the dinosaurs

The skull pieces sit in the rock like a faint fingerprint, the kind you could walk past in the Kimberley heat and never notice. But those scraps, collected more than 60 years ago from what is now desert in far northwestern Western Australia, are changing the picture of who first took charge in the seas after Earth’s worst mass extinction. About 252 million years ago, the end-Permian crisis tore through life on land and in the oceans. Soon after, during the earliest Triassic, limbed vertebrates began pushing into coastal waters and rising into predator roles. Fossils of these early sea-going tetrapods have mostly come from the Northern Hemisphere. The Southern Hemisphere record has stayed thin and patchy. Now a reexamination of Early Triassic remains from the Blina Shale, near Derby in the central-southern Kimberley region, points to a marine amphibian community that was more diverse than previously thought, with links that stretched far beyond Australia. Early Triassic (∼250 Ma) paleobiogeographic distributions of Erythrobatrachus noonkanbahensis (star) and Aphaneramma in Australia (star). (CREDIT: Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology) …