We are one step closer to nerve regeneration By Annalee…

We are one step closer to nerve regeneration By Annalee Newitz One of the great tragedies that goes along with spinal injury is paralysis. This happens because our damaged nerve cells can’t fully regenerate. But what if we could unlock the key to neural rejuvenation? Now, a team of neuroscientists have discovered a gene in fruit flies — somewhat similar to a human gene — that controls how nerves re-establish links with each other after they’ve been severed. This could open up a new avenue of research into undoing the injuries that cause paralysis and other neurological disorders. The team has published their work this week in  Cell Reports . According to  a release from Penn State University :  A gene that is associated with regeneration of injured nerve cells has been identified by scientists led by Melissa Rolls at Penn State University. The team, which includes scientists at Penn State and Duke University, has found that a mutation in a single gene can entirely shut down the process by which axons — the parts of the nerve cell that are responsible for sending signals to other cells — regrow themselves after being cut or damaged. This image illlustrates a finding of the research, which is that, in fruit flies with two normal copies of the  spastin  gene, Rolls and her team found that severed axons were able to regenerate. However, in fruit flies with two or even only one abnormal  spastin  gene, the severed axons were not able to regenerate. “We are hopeful that this discovery will open the door to new research related to spinal-cord and other neurological disorders in humans,” Rolls said. One day, when we fully understand the mechanisms underlying axon regeneration, it’s possible we could induce nerve cells to regenerate by administering a drug that emulates the activity of the  spastin  gene. You can read the scientific paper in  Cell Reports .

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We are one step closer to nerve regeneration By Annalee…

Behold, ALL the birds

By Robert T. Gonzalez Feast your eyes on the first complete evolutionary tree for all known modern bird species. It’s exhaustive, colorful, and beautiful to behold — a little like an avicular  Hillis Plot . But for all that this diagram tells us about birds’ evolutionary histories, what’s really interesting is what it says about how birds continue to evolve  today.  It’s Okay to be Smart ’s Joe Hanson explains: It was thought that any given species would expand and diversify quickly into subspecies (like the many different kinds of honeybees), soon maxing out its environment and filling all the ecological “niches”. Then, competition over limited resources would thin that down to the few most adaptable species. This tree says the opposite, that birds are continuing to diversify even today, and fast. The center of this tree, anchoring branches built using fossil and DNA sequence data, reaches back nearly 50 million years, to the earliest days of birds branching off of dinosaurs. Read the original study in  Nature , or these excellent synopses at  It’s Okay to be Smart  and  Science News . 

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Behold, ALL the birds