نتایج جستجو برای: blastema tissue

تعداد نتایج: 918684  

Journal: :Development 2016
Johanna E Farkas Polina D Freitas Donald M Bryant Jessica L Whited James R Monaghan

The Mexican axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum) is capable of fully regenerating amputated limbs, but denervation of the limb inhibits the formation of the post-injury proliferative mass called the blastema. The molecular basis behind this phenomenon remains poorly understood, but previous studies have suggested that nerves support regeneration via the secretion of essential growth-promoting factors....

2015
Yoshimasa Hamada Tetsuya Bando Taro Nakamura Yoshiyasu Ishimaru Taro Mito Sumihare Noji Kenji Tomioka Hideyo Ohuchi

Hemimetabolous insects such as the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus regenerate lost tissue parts using blastemal cells, a population of dedifferentiated proliferating cells. The expression of several factors that control epigenetic modification is upregulated in the blastema compared with differentiated tissue, suggesting that epigenetic changes in gene expression might control the differentiation s...

2015
E. A. B. Gilbert S. L. Delorme M. K. Vickaryous

Although amniotes (reptiles, including birds, and mammals) are capable of replacing certain tissues, complete appendage regeneration is rare. Perhaps the most striking example is the lizard tail. Tail loss initiates a spontaneous epimorphic (blastema-mediated) regenerative program, resulting in a fully functional but structurally non-identical replacement. Here we review lizard tail regeneratio...

2011
Yongjun Wang Ruili Wang Shengjuan Jiang Weijuan Zhou Yan Liu Yingjie Wang Qing Gu Yun Gu Yingying Dong Mei Liu Xingxing Gu Fei Ding Xiaosong Gu

Several adult reptiles, such as Gekko japonicus, have the ability to precisely re-create a missing tail after amputation. To ascertain the associated acquisition of positional information from blastemal cells and the underlying molecular mechanism of tail regeneration, a candidate molecule CD59 was isolated from gecko. CD59 transcripts displayed a graded expression in the adult gecko spinal cor...

Journal: :Mechanisms of Development 2004
Rei Katogi Yuki Nakatani Tadasu Shin-i Yuji Kohara Keiji Inohaya Akira Kudo

Medaka is an attractive model to study epimorphic regeneration. The fins have remarkable regenerative capacity and are replaced about 14 days after amputation. The formation of blastema, a mass of undifferentiated cells, is essential for regeneration; however, the molecular mechanisms are incompletely defined. To identify the genes required for fin regeneration, especially for blastema formatio...

2016
Richard W.D. Gilbert Matthew K. Vickaryous Alicia M. Viloria-Petit

Transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) signalling is essential for wound healing, including both non-specific scar formation and tissue-specific regeneration. Specific TGFβ isoforms and downstream mediators of canonical and non-canonical signalling play different roles in each of these processes. Here we review the role of TGFβ signalling during tissue repair, with a particular focus on the pro...

2013
Catherine D. McCusker David M. Gardiner

The regenerating region of an amputated salamander limb, known as the blastema, has the amazing capacity to replace exactly the missing structures. By grafting cells from different stages and regions of blastemas induced to form on donor animals expressing Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP), to non-GFP host animals, we have determined that the cells from early stage blastemas, as well as cells at ...

Journal: :Okajimas folia anatomica Japonica 2013
Takashi Shimokawa Rieko Kominami Satoru Yasutaka Harumichi Shinohara

Axolotls (Ambystoma mexicanum) have the ability to regenerate amputated limbs throughout their life span. In the present study, we attempted to elucidate how axolotls can specify limb type correctly during the regeneration process. We misexpressed Tbx5 in regenerating hindlimb blastema, and consequently a forelimb-like hindlimb regenerated from the hindlimb blastema. On the other hand, no chang...

Journal: :Developmental cell 2002
Sara Morais da Silva Phillip B Gates Jeremy P Brockes

The proximodistal identity of a newt limb regeneration blastema is respecified by exposure to retinoic acid, but its molecular basis is unclear. We identified from a differential screen the cDNA for Prod 1, a gene whose expression in normal and regenerating limbs is regulated by proximodistal location and retinoic acid: Prod 1 is the newt ortholog of CD59. Prod 1/CD59 was found to be located at...

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