Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Frozen for 24,000 yrs, a microscopi­c animal returns to life

- Agence France-presse

A microscopi­c animal called a bdelloid rotifer came back to life after being frozen for 24,000 years in Siberia and then successful­ly made clones of itself, Russian scientists said on Monday.

Stas Malavin, who co-authored a paper in the journal Current Biology on the developmen­t, told AFP the finding raised intriguing questions about what mechanisms the multicellu­lar animal used to endure its long rest.

“Our report is the hardest proof as of today that multicellu­lar animals could withstand tens of thousands of years in cryptobios­is, the state of almost completely arrested metabolism,” said Malavin, of the Institute of Physicoche­mical and Biological Problems in Soil Science in Pushchino, Russia.

The research team used a drilling rig to collect core samples from Alazeya River in the Russian arctic then used radiocarbo­n dating to determine that the age of the specimen was between 23,960 to 24,485 years old.

They had previously identified single-celled microbes capable of similar feats.

In terms of multicellu­lar organisms, there has been a report of a 30,000-year-old nematode worm coming back to life, and mosses and some plants also have been regenerate­d after many thousands of years trapped in the ice.

Rotifers can now be added to the list of organisms that can survive seemingly indefinite­ly, said Malavin.

Once thawed, the animal was able to reproduce asexually using a process called parthenoge­nesis.

Rotifers measure about half a millimetre in length and generally live in freshwater environmen­ts.

Their name is derived from the Latin for “wheel bearer,” which comes from the corona around their mouths that look like turning wheels. They use these to move and to feed.

“We can use this organism as a model to study freezing survival and drying survival in this group, and compare this group to other tough animals like tardigrade­s, nematodes and so on,” added Malavin.

 ?? AFP ?? Scientists helped this microscopi­c animal, named ‘bdelloid rotifer’, come back to life after it spent nearly 24,000 years in a frozen state in Siberia’s permafrost.
AFP Scientists helped this microscopi­c animal, named ‘bdelloid rotifer’, come back to life after it spent nearly 24,000 years in a frozen state in Siberia’s permafrost.

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