The removal of the neural tube in salamander embryos allows the development of nerve-free aneurogenic limbs. Limb regeneration is normally nerve-dependent, but the aneurogenic limb regenerates without nerves and becomes nerve-dependent after innervation. The molecular basis for these tissue interactions is unclear. Anterior Gradient (AG) protein, previously shown to rescue regeneration of denervated limbs and to act as a growth factor for cultured limb blastemal cells, is expressed throughout the larval limb epidermis and is down-regulated by innervation. In an aneurogenic limb, the level of AG protein remains high in the epidermis throughout development and regeneration, but decreases after innervation following transplantation to a normal host. Aneurogenic epidermis also shows a fivefold difference in secretory gland cells, which express AG protein. The persistently high expression of AG in the epithelial cells of an aneurogenic limb ensures that regeneration is independent of the nerve. These findings provide an explanation for this classical problem, and identify regulation of the epidermal niche by innervation as a distinctive developmental mechanism that initiates the nerve dependence of limb regeneration. The absence of this regulation during anuran limb development might suggest that it evolved in relation to limb regeneration.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1108472108 | DOI Listing |
Methods Mol Biol
October 2022
Department of Biology & UF Genetics Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
For 70 years from the very beginning of developmental biology, the salamander embryo was the pre-eminent model for these studies. Here I review the major discoveries that were made using salamander embryos including regionalization of the mesoderm; patterning of the neural plate; limb development, with the pinnacle being Spemann's Nobel Prize for the discovery of the organizer; and the phenomenon of induction. Salamanders have also been the major organism for elucidating discoveries in organ regeneration, and these are described here too beginning with Spallanzani's experiments in 1768.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Biol
January 2016
Zoology: Biodiversity and Toxicology, Centre for Environmental Sciences, Hasselt University, Agoralaan, Building D, BE 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium. Electronic address:
The importance of nerve-derived signalling for correct regeneration has been the topic of research for more than a hundred years, but we are just beginning to identify the underlying molecular pathways of this process. Within the current review, we attempt to provide an extensive overview of the neural influences during early and late phases of both vertebrate and invertebrate regeneration. In general, denervation impairs limb regeneration, but the presence of nerves is not essential for the regeneration of aneurogenic extremities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
November 2015
Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology, Division of Biosciences, University College London, London, WC1E 6BT, UK,
Limb regeneration of salamanders is nerve dependent, and the removal of the nerves in early stages of limb regeneration severely curtails the proliferation of the blastemal cells and growth of the regenerate. The removal of the neural tube from a developing salamander embryo results in an aneurogenic larva and the aneurogenic limb (ANL) develops independently without innervation. Paradoxically, the limb in an ANL is capable of regeneration in a nerve-independent manner.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Neurosci
November 2012
Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology, Division of Life Sciences, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK.
Many regeneration contexts require the presence of regenerating nerves as a transient component of the progenitor cell niche. Here we review nerve involvement in regeneration of various structures in vertebrates and invertebrates. Nerves are also implicated as persistent determinants in the niche of certain stem cells in mammals, as well as in Drosophila.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2011
Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology, Division of Biosciences, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom.
The removal of the neural tube in salamander embryos allows the development of nerve-free aneurogenic limbs. Limb regeneration is normally nerve-dependent, but the aneurogenic limb regenerates without nerves and becomes nerve-dependent after innervation. The molecular basis for these tissue interactions is unclear.
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