Department of Neuroscience, Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center, Ambystoma Genetic Stock Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536, United States.
Department of Mathematics, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506, United States.
Comp Biochem Physiol C Toxicol Pharmacol. 2018 Jun;208:53-63. doi: 10.1016/j.cbpc.2017.10.010. Epub 2017 Oct 26.
Cells within salamander limbs retain memories that inform the correct replacement of amputated tissues at different positions along the length of the arm, with proximal and distal amputations completing regeneration at similar times. We investigated the possibility that positional memory is associated with variation in transcript abundances along the proximal-distal limb axis. Transcripts were deeply sampled from Ambystoma mexicanum limbs at the time they were administered fore arm vs upper arm amputations, and at 19 post-amputation time points. After amputation and prior to regenerative outgrowth, genes typically expressed by differentiated muscle cells declined more rapidly in upper arms while cell cycle transcripts were expressed more highly. These and other expression patterns suggest upper arms undergo more robust tissue remodeling and cell proliferation responses after amputation, and thus provide an explanation for why the overall time to complete regeneration is similar for proximal and distal amputations. Additionally, we identified candidate positional memory genes that were expressed differently between fore and upper arms that encode a surprising number of epithelial proteins and a variety of cell surface, cell adhesion, and extracellular matrix molecules. Also, genes were discovered that exhibited different, bivariate patterns of gene expression between fore and upper arms, implicating dynamic transcriptional regulation for the first time in limb regeneration. Finally, 43 genes expressed differently between fore and upper arm samples showed similar transcriptional patterns during retinoic acid-induced reprogramming of fore arm blastema cells into upper arm cells. Our study provides new insights about the basis of positional information in regenerating axolotl limbs.
蝾螈肢体中的细胞保留着记忆,这些记忆可以告知肢体在不同位置的正确替换,近端和远端截肢可以在相似的时间完成再生。我们研究了位置记忆是否与肢体近端-远端轴上转录物丰度的变化有关。在给予前臂截肢和上臂截肢时,以及在截肢后 19 个时间点,我们从墨西哥钝口螈的肢体中深度采样了转录本。在截肢和再生性生长之前,通常由分化的肌肉细胞表达的基因在上臂中更快地下降,而细胞周期转录本表达更高。这些和其他表达模式表明,在上臂截肢后,组织重塑和细胞增殖反应更为强烈,这也解释了为什么近端和远端截肢的总再生时间相似。此外,我们还鉴定了候选的位置记忆基因,这些基因在前臂和上臂之间的表达不同,它们编码了大量的上皮蛋白以及各种细胞表面、细胞黏附和细胞外基质分子。此外,还发现了一些基因在前臂和上臂之间表现出不同的双变量表达模式,这首次表明在肢体再生中存在动态转录调控。最后,43 个在前臂和上臂样本之间表达不同的基因在前臂芽细胞在视黄酸诱导下重编程为上臂细胞的过程中表现出相似的转录模式。我们的研究为再生蝾螈肢体中位置信息的基础提供了新的见解。