Alibardi Lorenzo, Meyer-Rochow Victor Benno
Comparative Histolab Padova and Department of Biology, University of Bologna, 40121 Bologna, Italy.
Agricultural Science and Technology Research Institute, Andong National University, Andong 36729, Korea.
J Dev Biol. 2021 Aug 30;9(3):36. doi: 10.3390/jdb9030036.
The ability to repair injuries among reptiles, i.e., ectothermic amniotes, is similar to that of mammals with some noteworthy exceptions. While large wounds in turtles and crocodilians are repaired through scarring, the reparative capacity involving the tail derives from a combined process of wound healing and somatic growth, the latter being continuous in reptiles. When the tail is injured in juvenile crocodilians, turtles and tortoises as well as the tuatara (Rhynchocephalia: , Gray 1842), the wound is repaired in these reptiles and some muscle and connective tissue and large amounts of cartilage are regenerated during normal growth. This process, here indicated as "regengrow", can take years to produce tails with similar lengths of the originals and results in only apparently regenerated replacements. These new tails contain a cartilaginous axis and very small (turtle and crocodilians) to substantial (e.g., in tuatara) muscle mass, while most of the tail is formed by an irregular dense connective tissue containing numerous fat cells and sparse nerves. Tail regengrow in the tuatara is a long process that initially resembles that of lizards (the latter being part of the sister group Squamata within the Lepidosauria) with the formation of an axial ependymal tube isolated within a cartilaginous cylinder and surrounded by an irregular fat-rich connective tissue, some muscle bundles, and neogenic scales. Cell proliferation is active in the apical regenerative blastema, but much reduced cell proliferation continues in older regenerated tails, where it occurs mostly in the axial cartilage and scale epidermis of the new tail, but less commonly in the regenerated spinal cord, muscles, and connective tissues. The higher tissue regeneration of and other lepidosaurians provides useful information for attempts to improve organ regeneration in endothermic amniotes.
爬行动物(即变温羊膜动物)修复损伤的能力与哺乳动物相似,但也有一些值得注意的例外。虽然海龟和鳄鱼的大伤口是通过瘢痕形成来修复的,但尾巴的修复能力源于伤口愈合和体细胞生长的联合过程,后者在爬行动物中是持续进行的。当幼年鳄鱼、海龟和陆龟以及楔齿蜥(喙头目:楔齿蜥属,格雷,1842年)的尾巴受伤时,这些爬行动物的伤口会得到修复,并且在正常生长过程中会再生一些肌肉、结缔组织和大量软骨。这个过程,这里称为“再生生长”,可能需要数年时间才能长出与原来长度相似的尾巴,并且只会产生明显再生的替代物。这些新尾巴包含一个软骨轴和非常小(海龟和鳄鱼)到大量(例如楔齿蜥)的肌肉组织,而尾巴的大部分是由含有大量脂肪细胞和稀疏神经的不规则致密结缔组织形成的。楔齿蜥的尾巴再生生长是一个漫长的过程,最初类似于蜥蜴(蜥蜴是鳞龙超目姐妹群有鳞目),会形成一个隔离在软骨圆柱内的轴向室管膜管,周围是不规则的富含脂肪的结缔组织、一些肌束和新生鳞片。细胞增殖在顶端再生芽基中活跃,但在较老的再生尾巴中细胞增殖会大大减少,在那里它主要发生在新尾巴的轴向软骨和鳞片表皮中,但在再生脊髓、肌肉和结缔组织中较少见。楔齿蜥和其他鳞龙超目的较高组织再生能力为试图改善恒温羊膜动物的器官再生提供了有用信息。