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Gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the Mexican axolotl

Salamander limb regeneration is dependent upon tissue interactions that are local to the amputation site. Communication among limb epidermis, peripheral nerves, and mesenchyme coordinate cell migration, cell proliferation, and tissue patterning to generate a blastema, which will form missing limb st...

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Autores principales: Monaghan, James R., Athippozhy, Antony, Seifert, Ashley W., Putta, Sri, Stromberg, Arnold J., Maden, Malcolm, Gardiner, David M., Voss, S. Randal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Company of Biologists 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3507169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23213371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.20121594
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author Monaghan, James R.
Athippozhy, Antony
Seifert, Ashley W.
Putta, Sri
Stromberg, Arnold J.
Maden, Malcolm
Gardiner, David M.
Voss, S. Randal
author_facet Monaghan, James R.
Athippozhy, Antony
Seifert, Ashley W.
Putta, Sri
Stromberg, Arnold J.
Maden, Malcolm
Gardiner, David M.
Voss, S. Randal
author_sort Monaghan, James R.
collection PubMed
description Salamander limb regeneration is dependent upon tissue interactions that are local to the amputation site. Communication among limb epidermis, peripheral nerves, and mesenchyme coordinate cell migration, cell proliferation, and tissue patterning to generate a blastema, which will form missing limb structures. An outstanding question is how cross-talk between these tissues gives rise to the regeneration blastema. To identify genes associated with epidermis-nerve-mesenchymal interactions during limb regeneration, we examined histological and transcriptional changes during the first week following injury in the wound epidermis and subjacent cells between three injury types; 1) a flank wound on the side of the animal that will not regenerate a limb, 2) a denervated limb that will not regenerate a limb, and 3) an innervated limb that will regenerate a limb. Early, histological and transcriptional changes were similar between the injury types, presumably because a common wound-healing program is employed across anatomical locations. However, some transcripts were enriched in limbs compared to the flank and are associated with vertebrate limb development. Many of these genes were activated before blastema outgrowth and expressed in specific tissue types including the epidermis, peripheral nerve, and mesenchyme. We also identified a relatively small group of transcripts that were more highly expressed in innervated limbs versus denervated limbs. These transcripts encode for proteins involved in myelination of peripheral nerves, epidermal cell function, and proliferation of mesenchymal cells. Overall, our study identifies limb-specific and nerve-dependent genes that are upstream of regenerative growth, and thus promising candidates for the regulation of blastema formation.
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spelling pubmed-35071692012-12-04 Gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the Mexican axolotl Monaghan, James R. Athippozhy, Antony Seifert, Ashley W. Putta, Sri Stromberg, Arnold J. Maden, Malcolm Gardiner, David M. Voss, S. Randal Biol Open Research Article Salamander limb regeneration is dependent upon tissue interactions that are local to the amputation site. Communication among limb epidermis, peripheral nerves, and mesenchyme coordinate cell migration, cell proliferation, and tissue patterning to generate a blastema, which will form missing limb structures. An outstanding question is how cross-talk between these tissues gives rise to the regeneration blastema. To identify genes associated with epidermis-nerve-mesenchymal interactions during limb regeneration, we examined histological and transcriptional changes during the first week following injury in the wound epidermis and subjacent cells between three injury types; 1) a flank wound on the side of the animal that will not regenerate a limb, 2) a denervated limb that will not regenerate a limb, and 3) an innervated limb that will regenerate a limb. Early, histological and transcriptional changes were similar between the injury types, presumably because a common wound-healing program is employed across anatomical locations. However, some transcripts were enriched in limbs compared to the flank and are associated with vertebrate limb development. Many of these genes were activated before blastema outgrowth and expressed in specific tissue types including the epidermis, peripheral nerve, and mesenchyme. We also identified a relatively small group of transcripts that were more highly expressed in innervated limbs versus denervated limbs. These transcripts encode for proteins involved in myelination of peripheral nerves, epidermal cell function, and proliferation of mesenchymal cells. Overall, our study identifies limb-specific and nerve-dependent genes that are upstream of regenerative growth, and thus promising candidates for the regulation of blastema formation. The Company of Biologists 2012-07-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3507169/ /pubmed/23213371 http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.20121594 Text en © 2012. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Monaghan, James R.
Athippozhy, Antony
Seifert, Ashley W.
Putta, Sri
Stromberg, Arnold J.
Maden, Malcolm
Gardiner, David M.
Voss, S. Randal
Gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the Mexican axolotl
title Gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the Mexican axolotl
title_full Gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the Mexican axolotl
title_fullStr Gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the Mexican axolotl
title_full_unstemmed Gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the Mexican axolotl
title_short Gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the Mexican axolotl
title_sort gene expression patterns specific to the regenerating limb of the mexican axolotl
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3507169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23213371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.20121594
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