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Dissecting the Biological Complexity of Animal Regeneration

Dissecting the Biological Complexity of Animal Regeneration

Sanford Stem Cell Institute Seminar Series

University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego

December 3, 202557m 1s

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Show Notes

Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado, Ph.D., argues that real progress in understanding regeneration comes from studying whole organisms rather than cells grown under artificial conditions. Sánchez Alvarado shows how observations from intact animals reveal organizing rules that narrow laboratory systems can miss. He presents evidence that stem cells in a studied animal lack detectable junctions with neighboring cells and instead respond to signals that travel across tissues. Sánchez Alvarado links this communication to extracellular vesicles that carry RNA and to metabolic support involving creatine, highlighting how distant tissues influence repair. Using imaging and molecular analyses, he tracks how signals move through the body and how specific cell populations change state during recovery. Sánchez Alvarado concludes that broad, comparative research is essential for uncovering general principles that govern how adult tissues restore form and function. Series: "Stem Cell Channel" [Health and Medicine] [Science] [Show ID: 40454]

Topics

regenerationstem cellstissue culturein vitromodel organismsdomesticationvertebratesinvertebratesphylogenetic analysisdevelopmentpotencyplasticityrepairextracellular vesiclesRNAcreatinelong distance signalingepidermisp