We took a jellyfish, and did a bunch of studies to understand how it
activates its muscles. We studied its propulsion and we made a map of
where every single cell was. We used a software programme that we had
developed a few years ago, borrowed from law enforcement agencies for
doing quantitative analysis of fingerprints, and we used it to analyse
the protein networks inside the cells.
We found something very interesting right away: the electrical
signals that the jellyfish uses to coordinate its pumping are exactly
like that of the heart. In the heart, the action potential [electrical
signal that travels along nerves – Ed] propagates as a wave through
cardiac muscle. That’s how you get this nice, smooth contraction. The
activation has to spread like when you drop a pebble in water. The same
thing happens in the jellyfish, and I don’t think that’s by accident. My
bet is that to get a muscular pump, the electrical activity has got to
spread as a wavefront.
After we had the map of where every cell was, we took a rat apart and rebuilt it as a jellyfish.
-- Kit Parker in an
interview with Ed Yong. His team also hope to reverse-engineer other marine life forms. “We’ve got a whole tank of stuff in there, and an octopus on order.”
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