Asexual, Tough-as-Hulk Animals Withstand Hulk-Level Radiation

The microscopic bdelloid rotifer—best known as an all-females species that hasn’t had sex for 100 million years—has thwarted the attempts of Eugene Gladyshev and Matthew Meselson to mutate their genes with blasts of gamma radiation. Although the radiation shattered their genomes—it was a far higher dose than had ever been tolerated by an animal to date—the plucky, resourceful gals sewed their chromosomes back together and not only survived the blasts but continued to reproduce.

bdelloid.JPG

Bdelloids employ this same resilience in the face of another type of dry spell—they are known to repair their genes, survive, and reproduce even after complete desiccation. The authors believe that they used a similar trick to shrug off the massive radiation doses, and they hope to learn how humans can resist similar gene breakage due to free radicals, a bugbear that’s implicated in cancer and aging.

Image Credit: Diego Fontaneto

March 25th, 2008 Tags: , , , ,
by Lizzy Buchen in Diseases, Injuries, & Other Ailments, The Wide (& Strange) World of Animals | 3 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

3 Responses to “Asexual, Tough-as-Hulk Animals Withstand Hulk-Level Radiation”

  1. erin m Says:

    wow, hurray for females! strong, resilient, and independent.

    go Hillary!

  2. Paul Heinz Says:

    Please don’t disparage the poor little rotifer by comparing it to that woman. Obama. Obama. Can we puh-leeeeeease get moving with this?

    Oh, and interesting about the rotifers. who’d've thunk?

  3. DISCOVER.com Science, Technology and The Future Says:

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