The “zombie” sea cucumber
The “zombie” sea cucumber
A sea cucumber is a worm-shaped animal, although they are not worms, they are echinoderms, they are directly related to the sea stars and sea cucumbers and like the latter, some species, about 80 of sea cucumbers, out of a total of about 1700 known, there may be many more yet to be discovered, since there are 80 that are consumed and in fact in Japan they are part of their traditional dishes.
But how is it possible? Because we are faced with a very curious paradox, the sea cucumber is not immortal, it ages and dies, but if you cut a piece of its meat, that piece of meat will continue to live indefinitely in its natural environment. This paradox is what has baffled the scientists who are investigating the case and suspect that it opens a line of research that may provide clues for treatment in humans.
What the tissues did was directly absorb nutrients from the sea water. They also showed immune activity, that is, if a bacteria attacked them, they defended themselves against those microorganisms. There was also cell division because the tissue seems immortal, but the cells do not. The cells continued their more or less normal evolution and ended up dying over time, but first they divided, producing new cells. In fact, in some cases the tentacles, the area that was cut off from the tentacles, even after years continued to respond to touch by moving.
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