By identifying a key cell identity regulator, a team from UNIGE and the IMF has managed to modify the structure and function of tentacle cells in the hydra.
Humans, animals, plants: all multicellular organisms consist of so-called differentiated specialized cells. Thus, the cells that make up the epidermis do not have the same identity - nor the same function - as those that line the digestive system, for example. However, the mechanisms allowing these cells to maintain their identity are still poorly understood. Working on hydra, a team from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), in collaboration with the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research (IMF) in Basel, discovered one of the key regulators: the factor of transcription Zic4. After reducing its expression, researchers have found that the tentacle cells of the hydra change their identity and turn into foot cells, forming functional feet in the animal's head. These results are to be discovered in the journal Science Advances.
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