Home About Press Employ Contact Spyglass Advanced Search
HHMI Logo
HHMI News
HHMI News
Scientists & Research
Scientists & Research
Janelia Farm
Janelia Farm
Grants & Fellowships
Grants & Fellowships
Resources
Resources
HHMI Bulletin
Currrent Issue Subscribe
Back Issues About the Bulletin
August '07
Features
divider

A Different Mindsetsmall arrow

divider

The Wise Man
of Janeliasmall arrow


divider

Broken Symmetrysmall arrow

divider

Regeneration for
Repair's Sake


divider
Cech
divider
UpFront
divider
Chronicle
divider
Perspectives
divider
Editor

Subscribe Free
Sign up now and receive the HHMI Bulletin by mail free.small arrow

FEATURES
Regeneration for Repair's Sake

  By Kathryn Brown

Download Story PDF
E-mail This Story
The two-headed tadpoles were a shock. When he unexpectedly bred a dish of the aberrant creatures 19 years ago, Randall T. Moon soon realized he was witnessing the power of regeneration—in the form of a protein that helps regulate development.

"We knew this protein, called Wnt, helped flies develop, but its role in vertebrate models was completely unknown," says Moon, now an HHMI investigator at the University of Washington. The memorable tadpoles had higher than normal amounts of Wnt, loudly hinting that the protein's signals regulate early embryo development.

Illustration: Josh Cochran

dividers
PAGE 1 2 3 4 5
Continue small arrow
dividers
dividers
Back to Topto the top
HHMI Logo

Home | About HHMI | Press Room | Employment | Contact

© 2012 Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A philanthropy serving society through biomedical research and science education.
4000 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789 | (301) 215-8500 | e-mail: webmaster@hhmi.org