Positional plasticity in regenerating Amybstoma mexicanum limbs is associated with cell proliferation and pathways of cellular differentiation.
Author | |
---|---|
Abstract |
:
The endogenous ability to dedifferentiate, re-pattern, and re-differentiate adult cells to repair or replace damaged or missing structures is exclusive to only a few tetrapod species. The Mexican axolotl is one example of these species, having the capacity to regenerate multiple adult structures including their limbs by generating a group of progenitor cells, known as the blastema, which acquire pattern and differentiate into the missing tissues. The formation of a limb regenerate is dependent on cells in the connective tissues that retain memory of their original position in the limb, and use this information to generate the pattern of the missing structure. Observations from recent and historic studies suggest that blastema cells vary in their potential to pattern distal structures during the regeneration process; some cells are plastic and can be reprogrammed to obtain new positional information while others are stable. Our previous studies showed that positional information has temporal and spatial components of variation; early bud (EB) and apical late bud (LB) blastema cells are plastic while basal-LB cells are stable. To identify the potential cellular and molecular basis of this variation, we compared these three cell populations using histological and transcriptional approaches. |
Year of Publication |
:
2015
|
Journal |
:
BMC developmental biology
|
Volume |
:
15
|
Number of Pages |
:
45
|
Date Published |
:
2015
|
URL |
:
https://bmcdevbiol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12861-015-0095-4
|
DOI |
:
10.1186/s12861-015-0095-4
|
Short Title |
:
BMC Dev Biol
|
Download citation |