Skip to main content
School of Biological Sciences School of Biological Sciences

UC San Diego Researchers Explain the Mechanism of Asexual Reproduction in Freshwater Flatworms

September 25, 2017

By Cynthia Dillon and Mario Aguilera

Sword shaped white flatworm

Asexual Dugesia japonica are freshwater planarians of a few millimeters in length that reproduce by fission.

UC San Diego

Freshwater planarians, found around the world and commonly known as "flatworms," are famous for their regenerative prowess. Through a process called "fission," planarians can reproduce asexually by simply tearing themselves into two pieces— a head and a tail—which then go on to form two new worms within about a week.

When, where and how this process unfolds has remained a puzzle for centuries due to the difficulty of studying fission. But now, a team of University of California San Diego scientists provides a new biomechanical explanation in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Planarians are notoriously difficult to study. They do not like to be watched during fission, which primarily happens in the dark and halts at the slightest disturbance. Because fission does not happen frequently—approximately once a month for certain species—continuous video recordings are required to capture planarians in the act to study the details of its regeneration.

To understand where and how fission occurs in the planarian species Dugesia japonica, the researchers employed a mix of time-lapse video recordings, sensitive traction measurements, statistical analysis of hundreds of divisions and mathematical modelling.

Eva-Maria Collins, an associate professor in the Department of Physics and Section of Cell and Developmental Biology, and her colleagues were able to predict where planarian fission occurs based on its anatomy as well as explain how the process happens using a relatively simple mechanical model.

"Prior to our work, nobody knew where and how planarians divide," said Collins. "In fact, the last in-depth study of fission came to the conclusion that where fission occurs is unpredictable. Our results, showing that it can be predicted, therefore completely change the way we think about fission."

In earlier findings, Collins and her colleagues showed that where a planarian divides determines the relative size of the two offspring and thus their chances of survival and future reproduction. It also may be key in understanding how this form of asexual reproduction can give rise to diversity in a population without sexual reproduction.

Flatworm in fission (left) with strongest stress at the two nuclei (right)

A flatworm captured in the process of fission (left) and analyzed with a color-coded map (right), with red signifying the strongest substrate stress locations.

UC San Diego

As described in the PNAS study, the team found that fission always occurs in three stages: waist formation, pulsation and rupture. Waist formation is key to fission mechanics by creating a local, cross-sectional weak point. Then, extending and contracting pulses eventually cause rupture at the waist. Once ruptured, the two pieces regrow missing structures through a large pool of stem cells, which are central to planarians' ability to regenerate. How the stem cells are distributed among the two offspring remains unknown and is the link between this new study's findings and ongoing research in the Collins lab on the evolution of asexually reproducing species.

Michael Faraday, considered one the world's greatest scientists due to his physics and chemistry contributions, was reportedly fascinated by planarian fission. The intricate requirements of studying the worms may have prevented the famous 19th century physicist from fully deciphering the process.

Collins said that she wanted to understand how planarian fission worked the first time she saw pictures of the process many years ago. "Sometimes you simply see something in nature and want to understand how it works," she said, praising the contributions by co-first author Paul Malinowski and third-author Kelson Kaj, who were UC San Diego physics undergraduates during the research.

Other coauthors of the study include postdoctoral fellow Olivier Cochet-Escartin (shared co-first author), graduate student Edward Ronan, Professor Alex Groisman and Distinguished Professor Patrick Diamond. The research was supported by the BWF CASI and National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER 1555109 award, NSF PHY 1205921 award, Department of Energy Grant FG02-04ER54738, and the CMTFO and the Hellman URS Fellowship.

The first students to enroll at UC San Diego in 1960 were graduate students in the Department of Physics. Part of the Division of Physical Sciences, the department is ranked #16 by U.S. News and World Report. The Division of Biological Sciences, ranked #14, was also established early at the university. Today, UC San Diego biology is one of the most frequently declared undergraduate majors on campus.