Publications by authors named "Rena Kashimoto"

Severe muscle injury causes distress and difficulty in humans. Studying the high regenerative ability of the axolotls may provide hints for the development of an effective treatment for severe injuries to muscle tissue. Here, we examined the regenerative process in response to a muscle injury in axolotls.

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Axolotls have been considered to be able to regenerate their skin completely. Our recent study updated this theory with the finding that the lattice structure of dermal collagen fibers was not fully regenerated after skin injury. We also discovered that nerves induce the regeneration of collagen fibers.

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Genetic methods in axolotls (Ambystoma mexicanum) remain in their infancy which has hampered the study of limb regeneration. There is much room for advancement, especially with respect to spatiotemporal regulation of gene expression. Secreted growth factors play a major role in each stage of regeneration.

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The morphology of collagen-producing cells and the structure of produced collagen in the dermis have not been well-described. This lack of insights has been a serious obstacle in the evaluation of skin regeneration. We succeeded in visualizing collagen-producing cells and produced collagen using the axolotl skin, which is highly transparent.

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Urodele amphibians, Pleurodeles waltl and Ambystoma mexicanum, have organ-level regeneration capability, such as limb regeneration. Multipotent cells are induced by an endogenous mechanism in amphibian limb regeneration. It is well known that dermal fibroblasts receive regenerative signals and turn into multipotent cells, called blastema cells.

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Background: Axolotls can regenerate their limbs. In their limb regeneration process, developmental genes are re-expressed and reorganize the developmental axes, in which the position-specific genes are properly re-expressed. However, how such position specificity is reorganized in the regeneration processes has not been clarified.

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Amphibians have a very high capacity for regeneration among tetrapods. This superior regeneration capability in amphibians can be observed in limbs, the tail, teeth, external gills, the heart, and some internal organs. The mechanisms underlying the superior organ regeneration capability have been studied for a long time.

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Article Synopsis
  • Axolotls are known for their impressive ability to regenerate various organs, including limbs and hearts, but liver regeneration had not been studied until now.
  • The study used techniques such as block-face imaging and histology to analyze liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy, revealing a different structure and regeneration process compared to other vertebrates.
  • The results indicate that while axolotls increase the number of proliferating liver cells, they do not exhibit complete liver shape recovery, suggesting their regeneration mechanism is based on compensatory congestion rather than traditional epimorphic regeneration.
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