AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the role of wound epidermis (WE) and apical epithelial cap (AEC) in the regeneration of amputated appendages in amphibians, focusing on their secreted signaling molecules.
  • A transgenic Xenopus laevis model was used to isolate WE/AEC cells during tail regeneration, allowing the researchers to analyze changes in gene expression over several days post-amputation.
  • The analysis identified over 8,000 genes with dynamic expression, including seven significant secreted signaling molecules, revealing both common and unique gene expressions in tail versus limb AEC cells.

Article Abstract

Wound epidermis (WE) and the apical epithelial cap (AEC) are believed to trigger regeneration of amputated appendages such as limb and tail in amphibians by producing certain secreted signaling molecules. To date, however, only limited information about the molecular signatures of these epidermal structures is available. Here we used a transgenic Xenopus laevis line harboring the enhanced green fluorescent protein (egfp) gene under control of an es1 gene regulatory sequence to isolate WE/AEC cells by performing fluorescence-activated cell sorting during the time course of tail regeneration (day 1, day 2, day 3 and day 4 after amputation). Time-course transcriptome analysis of these isolated WE/AEC cells revealed that more than 8,000 genes, including genes involved in signaling pathways such as those of reactive oxygen species, fibroblast growth factor (FGF), canonical and non-canonical Wnt, transforming growth factor β (TGF β) and Notch, displayed dynamic changes of their expression during tail regeneration. Notably, this approach enabled us to newly identify seven secreted signaling molecule genes (mdk, fstl, slit1, tgfβ1, bmp7.1, angptl2 and egfl6) that are highly expressed in tail AEC cells. Among these genes, five (mdk, fstl, slit1, tgfβ1 and bmp7.1) were also highly expressed in limb AEC cells but the other two (angptl2 and egfl6) are specifically expressed in tail AEC cells. Interestingly, there was no expression of fgf8 in tail WE/AEC cells, whose expression and pivotal role in limb AEC cells have been reported previously. Thus, we identified common and different properties between tail and limb AEC cells.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dgd.12635DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

aec cells
20
secreted signaling
12
we/aec cells
12
day day
12
limb aec
12
transcriptome analysis
8
signaling molecule
8
molecule genes
8
apical epithelial
8
epithelial cap
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!