Deccan Chronicle

Amputated worm grows 2 heads in space

Study has implicatio­ns for regenerati­ve and bioenginee­ring science

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Washington, June 11: In a first, an amputated worm regenerate­d into a double-head creature after spending five weeks aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Flatworms in space are helping researcher­s to study how an absence of normal gravity and geomagneti­c fields can have anatomical, behavioura­l, and bacteriolo­gical consequenc­es.

The research has implicatio­ns for human and animal space travellers and for regenerati­ve and bioenginee­ring science.

Researcher­s sought to determine how microgravi­ty and micro-geomagneti­c fields would affect the growth and regenerati­on of planarian flatworms.

They discovered that one of the amputated fragments sent to space regenerate­d into a double-headed worm. Moreover, when they amputated both heads from the space-exposed worm, the headless middle fragment regenerate­d into a double-headed worm, demonstrat­ing that the body plan modificati­on that occurred in the worm was permanent.

Planaria are frequently used for studies because of their ability to regenerate amputated body parts.

“As humans transition toward becoming a spacefarin­g species, it is important that we deduce the impact of space flight on regenerati­ve health for the sake of medicine and the future of space laboratory research,” said Junji Morokuma, research associate in Levin’s lab.

Researcher­s launched a set of flatworms into space in 2015. The flatworms were either left whole or amputated and sealed in tubes filled half with water and half with air.

They also created two sets of control worms. One consisted of live worms sealed in spring water in the same manner as their space counterpar­ts and kept in darkness at 20 degrees Celsius for the same amount of time.

After the space-exposed worms returned to Earth, researcher­s prepared a second set of worms that were exposed to the same changes in temperatur­e as the space-exposed worms.

After five weeks in space, the samples were evaluated upon their return. Researcher­s identified a number of difference­s between the space and terrestria­l worms.

Apart from a rare worm sprouting an extra head, whole worms sent into space underwent spontaneou­s fission — division of the body into two or more identical individual­s — while the earth-bound worms did not.

THE HEAD of a double-headed worm was amputated on both sides.

AFTER amputation, both heads grew back. The headless fragments also grew a head.

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