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1.
Monoclonal antibody 9G1 (mAb 9G1) is reactive to the wound epithelium of axolotl larvae and therefore provided the opportunity to examine the interaction between the wound epithelium, nerves, and blastemal mesenchyme during axolotl limb regeneration. In unamputated limbs, mAb 9G1 is reactive to most or all cells of the dermis, skeletal elements, blood vessels, and nerves, to a few unidentified cells in muscle, and to none in epidermis. During regeneration of axolotl limbs, mAb 9G1 reacts strongly to an intracellular antigen of the blastemal mesenchyme and of the distal-most portion of the wound epithelium, the so-called apical epithelial cap (AEC). Because this thickened wound epithelium of regenerating amphibian limbs has been suggested as functioning in a manner similar to the apical ectodermal ridge (AER) of embryonic limb buds, it was of interest to further examine the reactivity of mAb 9G1 during various stages of regeneration. Whether mAb 9G1 reactivity in the AEC depended on mesenchyme and/or nerves was also tested. Monoclonal antibody 9G1 reactivity appears in the AEC of regenerating limbs prior to outgrowth of the blastema and persists throughout blastemal stages. Apical epithelial cap reactivity to mAb 9G1 is nerve dependent during early stages of blastema development and becomes nerve-independent at later stages. When epithelium-free blastemal mesenchyme is grafted onto injured flank musculature, ectopic limb regeneration occurs and the AEC derived from flank epidermis exhibits mAb 9G1 reactivity. These results show that a mAb 9G1 reactive AEC is characteristic of regenerating limbs and that expression of the 9G1 antigen by the AEC is dependent upon underlying blastemal mesenchyme and nerves.  相似文献   

2.
Previous studies have shown that both fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-1 and nerves play an important function during limb regeneration, but no correlation between these two regeneration factors has yet been demonstrated. In the present study we first establish that exogenous FGF-2, a member of the FGF family that binds to the same high-affinity receptors as FGF-1, is able to stimulate both [3H]-thymidine incorporation and the mitotic index in the mesenchyme and the epidermal cells of denervated blastemas. We then use cocultures of spinal cord and blastema on heparin-coated dishes, an in vitro system mimicking the in vivo interactions during limb regeneration, to show that interactions between nerve fibers from the spinal cord and the blastema enhance the release of bioactive FGF-1. Release of this growth factor seemed to correlate with nerve fiber regeneration, as it decreased in the presence of the dipeptide Leu-Ala, known to inhibit neurite outgrowth, while the inverse dipeptide Ala-Leu was inactive. Therefore, these results support our hypothesis that the interaction between nervous tissue and blastema is permissive for the release of FGF-1, which in turn stimulates blastema cell proliferation.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The amphibian limb is a model that has provided numerous insights into the principles and mechanisms of tissue and organ regeneration. While later stages of limb regeneration share mechanisms of growth control and patterning with limb development, the formation of a regeneration blastema is controlled by early events that are unique to regeneration. In this study, we present a stepwise experimental system based on induction of limb regeneration from skin wounds that will allow the identification and functional analysis of the molecules controlling this early, critical stage of regeneration. If a nerve is deviated to a skin wound on the side of a limb, an ectopic blastema is induced. If a piece of skin is grafted from the contralateral side of the limb to the wound site concomitantly with nerve deviation, the ectopic blastema continues to grow and forms an ectopic limb. Our analysis of dermal cell migration, contribution, and proliferation indicates that ectopic blastemas are equivalent to blastemas that form in response to limb amputation. Signals from nerves are required to induce formation of both ectopic and normal blastemas, and the diversity of positional information provided by blastema cells derived from opposite sides of the limb induces outgrowth and pattern formation. Hence, this novel and convenient stepwise model allows for the discovery of necessary and sufficient signals and conditions that control blastema formation, growth, and pattern formation during limb regeneration.  相似文献   

5.
Adult urodeles (salamanders) are unique in their ability to regenerate complex organs perfectly. The recently developed Accessory Limb Model (ALM) in the axolotl provides an opportunity to identify and characterize the essential signaling events that control the early steps in limb regeneration. The ALM demonstrates that limb regeneration progresses in a stepwise fashion that is dependent on signals from the wound epidermis, nerves and dermal fibroblasts from opposite sides of the limb. When all the signals are present, a limb is formed de novo. The ALM thus provides an opportunity to identify and characterize the signaling pathways that control blastema morphogenesis and limb regeneration. Our previous study provided data on cell contribution, cell migration and nerve dependency indicating that an ectopic blastema is equivalent to an amputation-induced blastema. In the present study, we have determined that formation of both ectopic blastemas and amputation-induced blastemas is regulated by the same molecular mechanisms, and that both types of blastema cells exhibit the same functions in controlling growth and pattern formation. We have identified and validated five marker genes for the early stages of wound healing, dedifferentiation and blastema formation, and have discovered that the expression of each of these markers is the same for both ectopic and amputation-induced blastemas. In addition, ectopic blastema cells interact coordinately with amputation-induced blastema cells to form a regenerated limb. Therefore, the ALM is appropriate for identifying the signaling pathways regulating the early events of tetrapod limb regeneration.  相似文献   

6.
The growth of regenerating limbs of amphibians depends upon proliferation of the blastema cells that accumulate beneath the epidermal cap. The epidermal cap is known to be mitogenic for the blastema cells. We have extracted a mitogenic activity from both the mesenchymal and epidermal (epidermal cap) components of cone stage blastemas which is retained on heparin-Sepharose and elutes with 1.15 M NaCl. This fraction stimulates neurite outgrowth of PC12 cells and [3H]thymidine incorporation into CCL 39 cells and is potentiated by heparin. The 2 M fraction was inactive. The heparin-Sepharose-purified growth factor cross-reacts with bovine acidic FGF polyclonal antibodies and shows a Mr of 16,000 on Western blots. Blastema membranes contain specific high affinity binding sites (Kd = 25 pM; capacity = 30 fmole/mg protein) and low affinity binding sites (Kd = 18 nM; capacity = 30 pmole/mg protein) for aFGF as revealed by Scatchard analysis. 125I-aFGF which is bound specifically by both the epidermal cap and mesenchyme of blastema frozen sections is displaced by an excess of unlabeled factor and inhibited by heparin. Heparinase treatment and 2 M NaCl washing which decreased the binding was fourfold more efficient for epidermal cap than for mesenchyme suggesting the presence of high affinity receptors in the latter tissue. The presence of aFGF (or a closely related molecule) in blastemas is consistent with our earlier results that showed stimulation of proliferation of cultured blastema cells by acidic or basic FGF or heparin alone. These results suggest the possibility that aFGF is stored in the epidermal cap during limb regeneration and that it stimulates the proliferation of the underlaying mesenchyme.  相似文献   

7.
In both larval and adult urodele amphibians, limb blastema formation requires the presence of an adequate nerve supply. In previous research, we demonstrated that the hindlimb of early Xenopus laevis larvae formed a regeneration blastema even when denervated, while the denervated limb of late larvae did not. We hypothesized that the nerve-independence was due to the autonomous synthesis of a mitogenic neurotrophic-like factor by undifferentiated limb bud cells. In this paper, we demonstrate that fgf-2 mRNA is present in larval limb tissues and that its level is correlated to the extent of mesenchymal cells populating the limb: in early limbs, fgf-2 mRNA is present at high levels all over the limb, while, in late limbs, the fgf-2 expression is low and detectable only in the distal autopodium. After denervation, fgf-2 mRNA synthesis increases in amputated early limbs but not in amputated late limbs. The implantation of anti-FGF-2 beads into amputated early limbs hardly lowers the mitotic activity of blastema cells. However, FGF-2 beads implanted into the blastema of late limbs prevent the denervation-induced inhibition of mitosis and oppose blastema regression. Our data indicate that FGF-2 is a good candidate for the endogenous mitogenic factor responsible for blastema formation and growth in amputated and denervated early limbs. However, in amputated late limbs, the very limited fgf-2 expression is not sufficient to promote blastema formation in the absence of nerves.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The presence of a mitogenic activity in limb blastemas of axolotls was detected in crude extracts of blastemas at the mid-bud stage. The mitogenicity of the extracts was estimated from the mitotic index of blastema cells grown for 6 days in the presence of limb blastema extracts, with colchicine present for the last 2 days. All the extracts tested (whole blastema, blastemal mesenchyme, epidermal cap) significantly enhanced proliferation of blastema cells. The highest stimulation factors we observed were 7 × with 7 g protein/ml whole blastema extracts, 5.2 × with 14 g/ml blastemal mesenchyme extracts, and 11 x with 3.5 g/ml epidermal cap extracts. Hence the epidermal cap extracts appeared to be the most mitogenic. Extracts from the blastemal mesenchyme, although less mitogenic than the epidermal cap extracts, were more potent than nerve extracts [Albert P, Boilly B (1986) Biol Cell 58:251–262]. These results are discussed with regard to the production of growth factors during limb regeneration.  相似文献   

9.
Amphibians can regenerate missing body parts, including limbs. The regulation of collagen has been considered to be important in limb regeneration. Collagen deposition is suppressed during limb regeneration, so we investigated collagen deposition and apical epithelial cap (AEC) formation during axolotl limb regeneration. The accessory limb model (ALM) has been developed as an alternative model for studying limb regeneration. Using this model, we investigated the relationship between nerves, epidermis, and collagen deposition. We found that Sp-9, an AEC marker gene, was upregulated by direct interaction between nerves and epidermis. However, collagen deposition hindered this interaction, and resulted in the failure of limb regeneration. During wound healing, an increase in deposition of collagen caused a decrease in the blastema induction rate in ALM. Wound healing and limb regeneration are alternate processes.  相似文献   

10.
Nerves, in conjunction with the apical epidermal cap (AEC), play an important role in the proliferation of the mesenchymal progenitor cells comprising the blastema of regenerating urodele amphibian limbs. Reinnervation after amputation requires factors supplied by the forming blastema, and neurotrophic factors must be present at or above a quantitative threshold for mitosis of the blastema cells. The AEC forms independently of nerves, but requires nerves to be maintained. Urodele limb buds are independent of nerves for regeneration, but innervation imposes a regenerative requirement for nerve factors on their cells as they differentiate. There are three main ideas on the functional relationship between nerves, AEC, and blastema cells: (1) nerves and AEC produce factors with different roles in maintaining progenitor status and mitosis; (2) the AEC produces the factors that promote blastema cell mitosis, but requires nerves to express them; (3) blastema cells, nerves, and AEC all produce the same factor(s) that additively attain the required threshold for mitosis.  相似文献   

11.
12.
We have modified and optimized the technique of organotypic slice culture in order to study the mechanisms regulating growth and pattern formation in regenerating axolotl limb blastemas. Blastema cells maintain many of the behaviors that are characteristic of blastemas in vivo when cultured as slices in vitro, including rates of proliferation that are comparable to what has been reported in vivo. Because the blastema slices can be cultured in basal medium without fetal bovine serum, it was possible to test the response of blastema cells to signaling molecules present in serum, as well as those produced by nerves. We also were able to investigate the response of blastema cells to experimentally regulated changes in BMP signaling. Blastema cells responded to all of these signals by increasing the rate of proliferation and the level of expression of the blastema marker gene, Prrx-1. The organotypic slice culture model provides the opportunity to identify and characterize the spatial and temporal co-regulation of pathways in order to induce and enhance a regenerative response.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Limb regenerative potential in urodeles seems to vary among different species. We observed that Triturus vulgaris meridionalis regenerate their limbs significantly faster than T. carnifex, where a long gap between the time of amputation and blastema formation occurs, and tried to identify cellular and molecular events that may underlie these differences in regenerative capability. Whereas wound healing is comparable in the two species, formation of an apical epidermal cap (AEC), which is required for blastema outgrowth, is delayed for approximately three weeks in T. carnifex. Furthermore, fewer nerve fibres are present distally early after amputation, consistent with the late onset of blastemal cell proliferation observed in T. carnifex. We investigated whether different expression of putative blastema mitogens, such as FGF1 and FGF2, in these species may underlie differences in the progression of regeneration. We found that whereas FGF1 is detected in the epidermis throughout the regenerative process, FGF2 onset of expression in the wound epidermis of both species coincides with AEC formation and initiation of blastemal cell proliferation, which is delayed in T. carnifex, and declines thereafter. In vitro studies showed that FGF2 activates MCM3, a factor essential for DNA replication licensing activity, and can be produced by blastemal cells themselves, indicating an autocrine action. These results suggest that FGF2 plays a key role in the initiation of blastema growth.  相似文献   

15.
The influence of the wound epithelium on the cellular events preceding blastema formation was examined by comparing dedifferentiation, DNA labeling indices, and mitotic indices of the distal mesodermal tissues in control regenerating newt forelimbs and in amputated forelimbs covered with a flap of full thickness skin. Three kinds of results were seen following the skin-flap graft operations. Epidermal migration across the amputation surface was completely inhibited in 22% (8) of the cases and these limbs repaired the amputation wound but did not form regeneration blastemas. In 11% (4) of the experimental limbs, essentially normal wound epithelia displaced the skin flaps and the limb stumps formed blastemas and regenerated. The majority of the skin grafts (67%) exhibited epidermal migration restricted to the free edges of the flaps. These limbs formed eccentric blastemas on the ventral side of the limb next to the dermis-free epidermis and regenerated laterally in that direction.  相似文献   

16.
The migration of dermal cells during blastema formation in axolotls   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Using the diploid/triploid cell marker in the axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum) we have examined the movement of cells from the dermis into the early limb blastema. Cells of dermal origin begin to migrate beneath the wound epithelium at about 5 days postamputation, and by 10 days they are widely distributed across the amputation surface. By 15 days, a dense accumulation of blastema cells is present beneath the apical cap, and these cells are preferentially oriented in a circumferential direction. These results are discussed in relation to previous studies showing that the progeny of dermal cells become widely distributed during regeneration, and that cells of dermal origin are a major source of blastema cells. The results are also discussed in relation to ideas about how growth and patterning of the new appendage occur.  相似文献   

17.
Immunocytochemistry utilizing a monoclonal antibody (BV1; blood vessel 1) highly reactive to the vasculature of the adult newt showed that a developing vasculature was present during early, pre-blastema, and early-bud blastema stages of forelimb regeneration in this species. Infusion of Prussian Blue and DiI into the brachial artery further delineated the intactness of this early vasculature. Finally, macroscopic observations of vascular flow underneath the apical epithelial cap (AEC) and microsurgical removal of the AEC and observation of subsequent bleeding buttressed the conclusion that an intact vasculature exists during early nerve-dependent stages of newt forelimb regeneration. The results suggest that this process of neovascular formation is angiogenesis, i.e., the formation of new vessels from pre-existing vessels in the stump. Furthermore, angiogenesis is an ongoing process initiated early after amputation. Blastema cells and the AEC are likely sourcesof factors that stimulate neovascularization.  相似文献   

18.
Denervation of the amputated limb of newts stops the regeneration process by decreasing blastema cell proliferation. We investigated the effect of the denervation on each of the two compartments (epidermal cap, mesenchyme) in mid-bud blastemas on the level of sulphated glycosaminoglycans (GAGS). Denervation resulted in an increase of about threefold in the incorporation of [35S] sulphate into mesenchyme GAGs but had no effect on the epidermal cap. The increase of GAG synthesis in the mesenchymal part of the blastema involved both heparan sulphates and chondroitin-dermatan sulphates. Gel filtration showed no change in GAGs size after denervation. These results confirm that the mesenchymal part of the mid-bud blastema is the main target of nerves and, as heparan sulphates are known to store acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF), a polypeptide found in the blastema (Boilly et al.. 1991), this suggest that the nerves' effect on glycosaminoglycans turnover could be implicated in the control of bioavailability of this growth factor in the blastema.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Previous grafting experiments have demonstrated that cells from non-contiguous positions within developing and regenerating limbs differ in a property referred to as positional identity. The goal of this study was to determine how long the positional identity of axolotl limb blastema cells is stable during culture in vitro. We have developed an assay for posterior positional properties such that blastema cells can be cultured and then grafted into anterior positions in host blastemas, to determine if they can stimulate supernumerary digit formation. We report that posterior blastema cells are able to maintain their positional identities for at least a week in culture. In addition, we observed that blastema cells are able to rapidly degrade collagenous substrates in vitro, a property that apparently distinguishes them from limb cells of other vertebrates. These results provide information regarding the time boundaries within which the positional properties of blastema cells can be studied and manipulated in vitro. Correspondence to: S.V. Bryant  相似文献   

20.
Urodele amphibians are the only vertebrates that can regenerate their limbs throughout their life. The critical feature of limb regeneration is the formation of a blastema, a process that requires an intact nerve supply. Nerves appear to provide an unidentified factor, known as the neurotrophic factor (NTF), which stimulates cycling of blastema cells. One candidate NTF is glial growth factor (GGF), a member of the neuregulin (NRG) growth factor family. NRGs are both survival factors and mitogens to glial cells, including Schwann cells. All forms of NRGs contain an EGF-like domain that is sufficient to activate NRG receptors erbB2, erbB3, and erbB4. To investigate the involvement of neuregulin in newt limb regeneration, we cloned and characterized one neuregulin isoform, a neuregulin with a cysteine-rich domain (CRD-NRG), from newt (Notophthalmus viridescens) spinal cord. Results of in situ hybridization showed that the newt CRD-NRG is highly expressed in dorsal root ganglia and spinal cord neurons that innervate the limbs. We also demonstrated the biological activity of recombinant human GGF2 (rhGGF2) in urodele limb regeneration. When rhGGF2 was injected into denervated, nerve-dependent axolotl blastemas, the labeling index (LI) of blastema cells was maintained at a level near to that of control, innervated blastemas, whereas without rhGGF2 the LI decreased significantly. In another experiment, rhGGF2 was delivered into denervated, nerve-dependent blastemas either by direct infusion into blastemas or by injection into the intraperitoneal cavity. The denervated blastemas were rescued into a regeneration response.  相似文献   

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