Gene-edited stem cells help geckos regrow more perfect tails

Experiments coaxed the geckos to regrow tails with some nerve tissue and bonelike cartilage

Mourning gecko

Mourning geckos (one shown) are an all-female species of lizard capable of regrowing their tails.

Brian Gratwicke/Flickr (CC BY 4.0)

Regenerating body parts is never easy. For instance, some lizards can grow back their tails, but these new appendages are pale imitations of the original. Now, genetically modified stem cells are helping geckos grow back better tails.  

Tweaking and implanting embryonic stem cells on the tail stumps of mourning geckos (Lepidodactylus lugubris) allowed the reptiles to grow tails that are more like the original than ever before, researchers report October 14 in Nature Communications. These findings are a stepping-stone to developing regenerative therapies in humans that may one day treat hard-to-heal wounds.

A gecko’s tail is an extension of its spine — with the vertebrae to prove it. Regenerated tails, however, are simpler affairs. “It’s just a bunch of concentric tubes of fat, muscle and skin,” says Thomas Lozito, a biologist at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

That’s because stem cells in adult geckos produce a molecular signal that encourages the formation of cartilage in new tails, but not bone or nervous tissues (SN: 8/17/18). Lozito and his colleagues used embryonic stem cells, which can develop into a wider range of tissues than adult stem cells, modified them to ignore this signal and then implanted them on the tail stumps of geckos that had their tails surgically removed. The tails that grew from these modified stem cells had bonelike grooves in the cartilage and generated new neural tissue at the top of the tail.

These modified tails still lack a spinal cord, making them a far cry from the original. “We fixed one problem, but there are still many imperfections,” Lozito says. “We’re still on the hunt for the perfect tail.” 

images of an original gecko tail, a regenerated tail, and a tail with modified stem cells
A gecko’s original tail (left in these micro CT scans) boasts vertebrae, while a regrown tail (middle) grows solid blocks of cartilage. Modifying stem cells helped a tail form bonelike grooves in the cartilage (right), bringing it closer to its original blueprint.Lozito Lab/USCA gecko’s original tail (left in these micro CT scans) boasts vertebrae, while a regrown tail (middle) grows solid blocks of cartilage. Modifying stem cells helped a tail form bonelike grooves in the cartilage (right), bringing it closer to its original blueprint.Lozito Lab/USC

About Freda Kreier

Freda Kreier was a fall 2021 intern at Science News. She holds a bachelor’s degree in molecular biology from Colorado College and a master’s in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

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