All Coral Cells Grown in a Dish for the First Time

Mon, 05 Jul 2021 03:45:00 GMT
Scientific American - Science

A new technique could reveal coral reefs’ vulnerabilities and regenerative potential

New research offers a way to keep all coral cell types alive in a lab culture for two weeks or longer, opening novel experimental possibilities.

The cells of cnidarians are notoriously difficult to culture.

These cells are easily damaged during extraction, and corals also have complex microbiomes that are tricky to eradicate with antibiotics-but if left alive, the microbes often take over cell cultures.

In it, her team details how to reduce a coral to its constituent cells and then grow them all together-like cultivating the animal on a plate.

These formulas let all the tested species' cell types grow at once, without microbes or extraneous tissues.

The new methodology will bring unparalleled visibility into how cell types interact, Traylor-Knowles says, and it will allow for higher-volume experiments without raising or killing whole animals.

Scientists do not yet understand all cnidarian cell types, let alone their functions.

These cultures could show how different cells respond to stressors, which types are most vulnerable to health failures-and possibly where cnidarians get their impressive regenerative abilities.

The study is groundbreaking, says molecular biologist Juris Grasis of the University of California, Merced, who was not involved with the paper but also studies cnidarians.

Some cell populations survived for as long as 30 days, he notes-which bodes well for the possibility of scaling up cell reproduction for future research.

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