Scientific News Biology The theories and researches of life COMMON AQUATIC ANIMALS SHOW EXTREME RESISTANCE TO RADIATION. FINDING COULD STIMULATE NEW STUDY OF FREE RADICALS’ ROLE IN INFLAMMATION, CANCER, AGING.
COMMON AQUATIC ANIMALS SHOW EXTREME RESISTANCE TO RADIATION.
FINDING COULD STIMULATE NEW STUDY OF FREE RADICALS’ ROLE IN INFLAMMATION,
CANCER, AGING.
Scientists at
Harvard University have found that a common class of freshwater invertebrate
animals called bdelloid rotifers are extraordinarily resistant to ionizing
radiation, surviving and continuing to reproduce after doses of gamma radiation
much greater than that tolerated by any other animal species studied to date.
Because free radicals such as those generated by
radiation have been implicated in inflammation, cancer, and aging in higher
organisms, the findings -- published this week in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences by Harvard's Matthew Meselson and graduate student
Eugene Gladyshev -- could stimulate new lines of research into these medically
important problems.
"Bdelloid rotifers are far more resistant to
ionizing radiation than any of the hundreds of other animal species for which
radiation resistance has been examined," says Meselson, Thomas Dudley Cabot
Professor of the Natural Sciences in Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
"They are able to recover and resume normal reproduction after receiving a
dose of radiation that shatters their genomes, causing hundreds of DNA
double-strand breaks which they are nevertheless able to repair."
Meselson and Gladyshev found that the bdelloid
rotifers Adineta vaga and Philodina roseola remained reproductively viable after
doses of radiation roughly five times greater than other classes of rotifers and
other animals could endure.
Such radiation resistance appears not to be the
result of any special protection of DNA itself against breakage, the researchers
say, but instead reflects bdelloid rotifers' extraordinary ability to protect
their DNA-repairing machinery from radiation damage.
Roughly a half-millimeter in size and commonly
observed under microscopes in high-school biology classes, bdelloid rotifers are
highly unusual in several regards: They appear to be exclusively asexual, have
relatively few transposable genes, and can survive and reproduce after complete
desiccation at any stage of their life cycle. Meselson and Gladyshev hypothesize
that it's this last property that explains bdelloids' apparently unique
resistance to radiation.
Bdelloid rotifers have been widely studied since
at least 1702, when the renowned Dutch scientist and microscopy pioneer van
Leeuwenhoek added water to dust retrieved from a rain gutter on his house and
observed the organisms in the resulting fluid. He subsequently described the
creatures in a letter to Britain's Royal Society, which still counts an envelope
of van Leeuwenhoek's rain-gutter dust among its holdings.
###
Contact: Steve Bradt
steve_bradt@harvard.edu
617-496-8070
Harvard University
Publishing date: March 31, 2008
Back
|