1. [Regeneration of planarians: experimental object].
- Author
-
Sheĭman IM and Kreshchenko ID
- Subjects
- Animals, Behavior, Animal physiology, Biomedical Research trends, Cell Differentiation, Cell Proliferation, Central Nervous System cytology, Central Nervous System physiology, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Helminth Proteins metabolism, Morphogenesis genetics, Planarians genetics, Planarians metabolism, Planarians ultrastructure, Russia, Central Nervous System growth & development, Genome, Helminth, Helminth Proteins genetics, Planarians growth & development, Regeneration physiology
- Abstract
We discuss the expediency of using invertebrates, such as flatworms and planarians, as experimental objects. Free-living planarian flatworms (phylum Platyhelminthes, class Turbellaria) are invertebrate animals in which a bilateral symmetry appears for the first time in evolution and organs and tissues form. As the highest ecological link of the food chain--predators--these animals are characterized by a set of behavioral reactions controlled by a differentiated central nervous system. Planarians have unsurpassed ability to regenerate lost or damaged body parts. Owing to the ease of their breeding and their convenience for manipulations, these animals are used to study the influence of chemical and physical factors on the processes of life, growth, and reproduction. Currently, planarians are recognized as a model for biological research in the field of regeneration, stem cell biology, study of their proliferation and differentiation, as well as the regulatory mechanisms of morphogenetic processes. The genome of the planarian Schmidtea mediterranea was fully sequenced, which opened up the opportunity to work with this object at the molecular biological level. Furthermore, planarians are used in neurobiological and toxicological studies, in studying the evolutionary aspects of centralization of the nervous system, mechanisms of muscle contraction, and in the development of new antiparasitic drugs. This review aims to demonstrate the relevance and diversity of research conducted on simple biological objects--planarians--to awider audience to show the historical continuity of these studies and their wide geographical distribution and to focus on the studies carried out in Russia, which, as a rule, are not included in the foreign reviews on planarian regeneration.
- Published
- 2015