Secret to immortality may lie with … jellyfish?
Sommer kept his hydrozoans in petri dishes and observed their reproduction habits. After several days he noticed that his Turritopsis dohrnii was behaving in a very peculiar manner, for which he could hypothesize no earthly explanation. Plainly speaking, it refused to die. It appeared to age in reverse, growing younger and younger until it reached its earliest stage of development, at which point it began its life cycle anew.
Sommer was baffled by this development but didn’t immediately grasp its significance. (It was nearly a decade before the word “immortal” was first used to describe the species.) But several biologists in Genoa, fascinated by Sommer’s finding, continued to study the species, and in 1996 they published a paper called “Reversing the Life Cycle.” The scientists described how the species — at any stage of its development — could transform itself back to a polyp, the organism’s earliest stage of life, “thus escaping death and achieving potential immortality.” This finding appeared to debunk the most fundamental law of the natural world — you are born, and then you die.
One of the paper’s authors, Ferdinando Boero, likened the Turritopsis to a butterfly that, instead of dying, turns back into a caterpillar. Another metaphor is a chicken that transforms into an egg, which gives birth to another chicken. The anthropomorphic analogy is that of an old man who grows younger and younger until he is again a fetus. For this reason Turritopsis dohrnii is often referred to as the Benjamin Button jellyfish.











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If I have to wear diapers again, I’d much prefer Pampers to Depends.
keep the change on November 29, 2012 at 6:23 PM
Soooo the RNC leadership in Congress is going to live forever?!?!?
29Victor on November 29, 2012 at 6:25 PM
Is that why RINOs stick around so long?
Chip on November 29, 2012 at 6:26 PM
Rats, beat me to it..
Chip on November 29, 2012 at 6:27 PM
Breaking: Obama proposes a tax on jellyfish.
darwin on November 29, 2012 at 6:42 PM
Raw or cooked?
FloatingRock on November 29, 2012 at 6:47 PM
It is annoying when a writer acts like he has discovered THE HOLY GRAIL and only the writer knows what he has discovered… DEAR GOD WHY havent the masses been mobilized and billions in research spent on this???!?!?
Oh yeah: because it isn’t really promising or relevant and nobody cares. It is a matter of curiosity and trivia, not a secret to immortality. Human beings arent jellyfish, and we certainly arent capable of changing our cellular structure. Even if we could, without preserving our brains intact we would “die” anyway and the new “polyp” would be a new person.
So there really isn’t any immortality here.
kaltes on November 29, 2012 at 7:41 PM