Hutchins Elizabeth D, Markov Glenn J, Eckalbar Walter L, George Rajani M, King Jesse M, Tokuyama Minami A, Geiger Lauren A, Emmert Nataliya, Ammar Michael J, Allen April N, Siniard Ashley L, Corneveaux Jason J, Fisher Rebecca E, Wade Juli, DeNardo Dale F, Rawls J Alan, Huentelman Matthew J, Wilson-Rawls Jeanne, Kusumi Kenro
School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, United States of America.
Neurogenomics Division, Translational Genomics Research Institute, Phoenix, Arizona, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Aug 20;9(8):e105004. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0105004. eCollection 2014.
Lizards, which are amniote vertebrates like humans, are able to lose and regenerate a functional tail. Understanding the molecular basis of this process would advance regenerative approaches in amniotes, including humans. We have carried out the first transcriptomic analysis of tail regeneration in a lizard, the green anole Anolis carolinensis, which revealed 326 differentially expressed genes activating multiple developmental and repair mechanisms. Specifically, genes involved in wound response, hormonal regulation, musculoskeletal development, and the Wnt and MAPK/FGF pathways were differentially expressed along the regenerating tail axis. Furthermore, we identified 2 microRNA precursor families, 22 unclassified non-coding RNAs, and 3 novel protein-coding genes significantly enriched in the regenerating tail. However, high levels of progenitor/stem cell markers were not observed in any region of the regenerating tail. Furthermore, we observed multiple tissue-type specific clusters of proliferating cells along the regenerating tail, not localized to the tail tip. These findings predict a different mechanism of regeneration in the lizard than the blastema model described in the salamander and the zebrafish, which are anamniote vertebrates. Thus, lizard tail regrowth involves the activation of conserved developmental and wound response pathways, which are potential targets for regenerative medical therapies.
蜥蜴是像人类一样的羊膜动物脊椎动物,能够失去并再生一条功能性尾巴。了解这一过程的分子基础将推动包括人类在内的羊膜动物的再生方法。我们对绿安乐蜥(Anolis carolinensis)进行了首次蜥蜴尾巴再生的转录组分析,结果揭示了326个差异表达基因,这些基因激活了多种发育和修复机制。具体而言,参与伤口反应、激素调节、肌肉骨骼发育以及Wnt和MAPK/FGF信号通路的基因在再生尾巴轴上存在差异表达。此外,我们鉴定出2个微小RNA前体家族、22个未分类的非编码RNA以及3个在再生尾巴中显著富集的新蛋白质编码基因。然而,在再生尾巴的任何区域都未观察到高水平的祖细胞/干细胞标志物。此外,我们沿着再生尾巴观察到多个组织类型特异性的增殖细胞簇,它们并不局限于尾巴尖端。这些发现预示着蜥蜴的再生机制与蝾螈和斑马鱼(它们是无羊膜动物脊椎动物)中描述的芽基模型不同。因此,蜥蜴尾巴的再生涉及保守的发育和伤口反应信号通路的激活,这些通路是再生医学疗法的潜在靶点。