Introduction
1 Uncovering Assumptions That Have Shaped Germ Cell Science
2 Backgrounding Conflicts within Germ Cell Science
3 Challenging Assumptions in Germline Science
4 Implications of Reenvisioning Germline Regeneration
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Kate MacCord is a teaching assistant professor in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University and the program administrator of the McDonnell Initiative at the Marine Biological Laboratory, where she also serves as the McDonnell Fellow. She is coauthor of What Is Regeneration?, also published by the University of Chicago Press.
"Conventional wisdom dictates that germ cells and somatic cells are
distinct entities and that although germ cells can give rise to
somatic cells, somatic cells cannot give rise to germ cells. In How
Does Germline Regenerate?, the author traces the origin of this
notion called the Weismann barrier. . . . The book is a
tour-de-force synthesis of the history of science, stem cell
biology, evo-devo, and gene editing. The conciseness and the
clarity of writing stand out and make this primer an accessible and
interesting read for anyone, including those who are unfamiliar
with these topics. The volume also offers a stark reminder of the
importance of tracing the origins of ideas and critically examining
assumptions in biology."
*The Quarterly Review of Biology*
"Short, nicely written and accessible. . . . MacCord’s book
convincingly shows that the Weismann barrier is a more normative
than empirical claim. By revisiting both well-known and
lesser-known episodes in the history of germ cell science, she
demonstrates that both scientific consensus and the evidence in
favour of the Weismann barrier were, and are, less straightforward
than is commonly believed. . . . A serious and competent analysis
of a topic that has not received the attention it deserves. . . .
Germ cell science is extremely important and has a tremendous
impact on many sensitive branches of medicine and the life
sciences. MacCord’s book opens a seminal and large window on this
too often neglected world. Hopefully more studies will follow in
her footsteps."
*The British Journal for the History of Science*
"How does a cell in a developing animal embryo know what to become?
The classic answer is that as changes to developing cells are made
during repeated divisions, daughter cells progressively narrow
their possible fates. Recent identification of stem cells in both
developing and adult organisms has questioned this notion by
showing that cells are far more plastic in their eventual fates
than previously thought: cells of one type may become another if
conditions permit. But is this true of every cell type, even germ
cells? Germ cells have long been considered fundamentally different
from somatic (body) cells, as they carry only half the DNA of
somatic cells. MacCord, a philosopher of science, argues
persuasively that it is time to challenge the long-held assumption
of a barrier between somatic cells and germ cells. Every animal
clade, she shows, can shape somatic cells into the cells of a
germline. This finding has profound practical consequences for both
stem cell therapies and gene-editing technologies such as CRISPR.
MacCord presents a well-reasoned argument built on solid historical
and scientific analysis, yet accessible to almost every curious
reader. Highly recommended."
*Choice*
“Excellent. A truly original take on the history of the Weismann
Barrier and how it developed into a questionable assumption that
forms the basis of various modern concepts about germ cells and
regeneration.”
*Hanna Lucia Worliczek, Max Planck Institute for the History of
Science, Berlin*
“We need to see regeneration as a window into the world of biology
in general, and the complex feedback loops that decide what grows,
divides and dies, where and when.”
*New Scientist, on "What Is Regeneration?"*
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