Some parts of our bodies can repair themselves quite well after injury, but others don’t repair at all. We certainly can’t regrow a whole leg or arm, but some animals CAN regrow – or regenerate – whole body parts. So what can we learn from these regenerative animals?
Salamanders, flatworms, and a number of other species can regrow damaged or missing body parts. This is regeneration.
Some human organs, like the liver and skin, also regenerate when they are damaged.
Regeneration can happen in many different ways, using pluripotent or tissue-specific stem cells. Some regeneration happens without stem cells at all (e.g. the regeneration of zebrafish hearts).
Studying regeneration in these species will help us understand how the human body heals and repairs itself, and why it fails to do so in some contexts. This could help researchers develop regenerative therapies to help the human body heal more fully.





