The future of human health:
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The salamander is a superhero of regeneration, able to replace lost limbs, damaged lungs, sliced spinal cord — even bits of lopped-off brain.

But it turns out that remarkable ability isn’t so mysterious after all — suggesting that researchers could learn how to replicate it in people…

…Based on experiments on genetically modified axolotl salamanders, the researchers show that cells from the salamander’s different tissues retain the “memory” of those tissues when they regenerate, contributing with few exceptions only to the same type of tissue from whence they came.

Standard mammal stem cells operate the same way, albeit with far less dramatic results — they can heal wounds or knit bone together, but not regenerate a limb or rebuild a spinal cord. What’s exciting about the new findings is they suggest that harnessing the salamander’s regenerative wonders is at least within the realm of possibility for human medical science.

The motto of a future biotech corporation: Less Human than Human.

Pic by furryscalyman.

Charles Mudede—who writes about film, books, music, and his life in Rhodesia, Zimbabwe, the USA, and the UK for The Stranger—was born near a steel plant in Kwe Kwe, Zimbabwe. He has no memory...

7 replies on “Today in Posthumanism”

  1. Frank Herbert derived the idea of the ‘axlotl tank’, which could regenerate living tissue from cadavers, from these creatures.

  2. Good, but please don’t let the writer get away with the revoltingly ignorant pleonasm “from whence.” Whence means “from where,” so when ignorati say “from whence,” they’re saying “from from where.” Report them to the Department of Redundancy Department for their Redundancy Dunce Caps.

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