Science
Related: About this forumWhat Can a Cell Remember? -- Quanta Magazine
https://www.quantamagazine.org/what-can-a-cell-remember-20250730/A small but enthusiastic group of neuroscientists is exhuming overlooked experiments and performing new ones to explore whether cells record past experiences fundamentally challenging what memory is.
McClintock had a reputation for eccentricity. Still, her question seemed more likely to come from a philosopher than a plant geneticist. She went on to describe lab experiments in which she had seen plant cells respond in a thoughtful manner. Faced with unexpected stress, they seemed to adjust in ways that were beyond our present ability to fathom. What does a cell know of itself? It would be the work of future biologists, she said, to find out.
Forty years later, McClintocks question hasnt lost its potency. Some of those future biologists are now hard at work unpacking what knowing might mean for a single cell, as they hunt for signs of basic cognitive phenomena like the ability to remember and learn in unicellular creatures and nonneural human cells alike. Science has long taken the view that a multicellular nervous system is a prerequisite for such abilities, but new research is revealing that single cells, too, keep a record of their experiences for what appear to be adaptive purposes.
In a provocative study published in Nature Communications late last year, the neuroscientist Nikolay Kukushkin and his mentor Thomas J. Carew at New York University showed that human kidney cells growing in a dish can remember patterns of chemical signals (opens a new tab) when theyre presented at regularly spaced intervals a memory phenomenon common to all animals, but unseen outside the nervous system until now. Kukushkin is part of a small but enthusiastic cohort of researchers studying aneural, or brainless, forms of memory. What does a cell know of itself? So far, their research suggests that the answer to McClintocks question might be: much more than you think.
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A fascinating account of some studies done over the years.


An illustration of a trumpet-shaped cell being experimented on.
The zoologist Herbert Spencer Jennings sits in front of a microscope.
In 1906, experiments by Herbert Spencer Jennings (right) suggested that the single-celled ciliate Stentor roeselii (left) can learn that it was changed by the experiences it has passed through, he wrote.

FirstLight
(15,690 posts)In the 'woo-woo' circles, cellular memory is often spoken of, especially in holistic healing. The nature of the body to revert to injury or inflammation states is often seen as a cellular memory.
Hasn't there also been studies done on generational memory/trauma passed down through dna?
I feel like this is something we should already "know" but it's very cool to see that mainstream science is embracing the concept. It will be a long time before regular dr's carry this belief/thought as base knowledge. But why shouldn't they?
If I can "feel" trauma from a flashback in my brain, even down to the sweat and heartbeat changes, why wouldn't that translate to each cell? I thnk we forget that these CELLS function within a whole organism, and the pathways of communication in the body are STILL being sussed out completely. (like the autoimmune system and gut-brain connections)
Really fascinating. I do my sound therapy on the basis of everything beng interconnected and seeing the body as part of a whole field of energy that a person carried/emanates. I can't separate the specific cells or tissues, because they all play in to the health of the Being. Must be hard to be a medical specialist and only work within such confines...
erronis
(21,095 posts)The compartmentalization of science and medicine (for example) is detrimental to understanding the whole. I'll take a while to digest what you wrote ---- thanks.