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Tardigrade Courtesy: EnWikipedia |
Anatomy of Tardigrade: Courtesy En Wikipedia |
Tardigrade is a simple uncomplicated organism. Its body cavity is filled with a colorless fluid hemolymph which facilitates oxygen and nutrient transport. It has eight stubby legs which it can move individually or collectively. Its nervous system too is very elementary. A cerebral ganglion on the head serves as the brain from which two nerve cords run under the belly along the whole length of body connecting smaller local nerve centres. Neurons may not exceed 200 in number. With such simple arrangement tardigrade can swim, walk or glide as it pleases, the speed and gait depending on the terrain on which it moves. It has a mouth for food intake and anus for waste removal. The eyespots, sensory whiskers and chemoreceptors collectively function as sensory organs. Above all they can multiply sexually or asexually. Enough for existence as well as subsistence.
Scientists irrespective of the disciplines they work, are enamored with this tiny yet resourceful organism. For example oncologists have long been frantically looking for ways and means to reduce collateral damage to healthy tissues of patients receiving radiation therapy. And here is this simpleton who can withstand intense doses of radiation. Research has revealed that tardigrades have a special protein called Dsup (short for Damage Suppressor Protein) in their genetic makeup. Dsup is a disordered polypeptide chain of 445 amino acid residues most of which are positively charged. These positive charges facilitate it to wrap around the negatively charged DNA as a protective cover. When Dsup gene is incorporated into the genome of laboratory mouse, the protein is expressed and the mouse exhibits radiation tolerance.
The ultimate in biomedical electronics is nanotattooing of biosensors and control devices on the patient's skin itself. As of now this happens only in science fiction. Nano lithography (or nanopatterning) as the process is called, is well standardized for inert surfaces and a variety of techniques are available to choose from. However none is suitable for live biological tissues because the processes involve several harsh steps such as intense radiations, wet/dry etching, high temperature curing, toxic solvent wash, vacuum etc. Recently a group of scientists from the School of Engineering, Westlake University, Hangshu and Institute for Optoelectronics, Hangshu, China. decided o take advantage of the cryptobiotic behavior of tardigrades. The organism was cooled to subzero temperature, goading it to go into cryptobiotic stage. While in that state, it was given a protective coat of anisole. A nanodesign was tattooed on the ice layer formed over the anisole coat using an electron beam. Wherever the beam impinged, anisole reacted to leave a biocompatible mark. The unreacted anisole layer was then vacuum evaporated. When brought back to room temperature the organism displayed the nanotattoo.
A batch of tardigrades in the dormant state of course, flew to the moon in an Israeli spaceship, Beresheet in 2019. Unfortunately the spaceship crash landed on the lunar surface. It is presumed that the crash as well as the unfriendly ambience of the moon would have been too much for the tardigrades to survive. But who knows, perhaps future holds that secret.
Tailpiece:
Cosmo Sheldrake 's song If I were a tardigrade..... ends like this :
If I shed all my liquid and let myself dry out
I'll shrivel and sleep for some 15-odd years
I'd wake up, come water, and get on with living
With time in my pocket to pass by the day
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REFERENCES:
1.It’s heroic, hardy and less than a millimetre long: meet the 2025 invertebrate of the year
2. The biomedical potential of tardigrade proteins: A review
3. Patterning on living tardigrades: Yang et al Nano Lett. 2025, 25, 6168−6175