Malamy Lab
The Malamy Lab investigates epithelial wound healing using the jellyfish Clytia hemisphaerica as a model system. This small marine organism, transitioning between polyp and medusa (jellyfish) forms, offers unique advantages for studying wound repair. The simplicity of its epithelial cell monolayer and rapid healing rate (approximately 3-6 mm²/min²) make it ideal for live imaging experiments. Their research explores ancient wound healing mechanisms, predating the divergence of cnidarians and bilaterians around 600 million years ago. By scratching the medusa surface and observing rapid healing processes, the lab aims to uncover fundamental insights into evolutionary conserved pathways crucial for tissue repair and regeneration.


Jocelyn Malamy
Steven L.
Manjula Mony

Zeeshan Banday
Jessie Palmer
Recent
Epithelial wound healing in Clytia hemisphaerica provides insights into extracellular ATP signaling mechanisms and P2XR evolution (2023)
Scholars show that eATP promotes closure of epithelial wounds in vivo in the cnidarian Clytia hemisphaerica (Clytia) indicating that eATP signaling is an evolutionarily ancient strategy in wound healing. Together, results re-draw the P2XR evolutionary tree, provide new insights into the origin of eATP signaling in wound healing, and demonstrate that the cytoskeleton of submarginal cells is a target of eATP signaling.