Literature DB >> 20141413

Regeneration in the hemichordate Ptychodera flava.

Tom Humphreys1, Akane Sasaki, Gene Uenishi, Kekoa Taparra, Asuka Arimoto, Kuni Tagawa.   

Abstract

When the body of P. flava is severed, the animal has the ability to regenerate its missing anterior or posterior as appropriate. We have focused on anterior regeneration when the head and branchial regions are severed from the body of the worm. After transection, the body wall contracts and heals closed in 2 to 3 days. By the third day a small blastema is evident at the point of closure. The blastema grows rapidly and begins the process of differentiating into a head with a proboscis and collar. At 5 days the blastema has increased greatly in size and differentiated into a central bulb, the forming proboscis, and two lateral crescents, the forming collar. Between 5 and 7 days a mouth opens ventral to the differentiating blastema. Over the next few days the lateral crescents extend to encircle the proboscis and mouth, making a fully formed collar. By 10 to 12 days a new head, sized to fit the worm's body, has grown attached to the severed site. At about this time the animal regains apparently normal burrowing behavior. After the head is formed, a second blastema-like area appears between the new head and the old body and a new branchial region is inserted by regeneration from this blastema over the next 2 to 3 weeks. The regenerating tissues are unpigmented and whitish such that in-situ hybridization can be used to study the expression of genes during the formation of new tissues.

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Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20141413     DOI: 10.2108/zsj.27.91

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Zoolog Sci        ISSN: 0289-0003            Impact factor:   0.931


  5 in total

1.  A pan-metazoan concept for adult stem cells: the wobbling Penrose landscape.

Authors:  Baruch Rinkevich; Loriano Ballarin; Pedro Martinez; Ildiko Somorjai; Oshrat Ben-Hamo; Ilya Borisenko; Eugene Berezikov; Alexander Ereskovsky; Eve Gazave; Denis Khnykin; Lucia Manni; Olga Petukhova; Amalia Rosner; Eric Röttinger; Antonietta Spagnuolo; Michela Sugni; Stefano Tiozzo; Bert Hobmayer
Journal:  Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc       Date:  2021-10-06

2.  The Global Diversity of Hemichordata.

Authors:  Michael G Tassia; Johanna T Cannon; Charlotte E Konikoff; Noa Shenkar; Kenneth M Halanych; Billie J Swalla
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-10-04       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Head regeneration in hemichordates is not a strict recapitulation of development.

Authors:  Shawn M Luttrell; Kirsten Gotting; Eric Ross; Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado; Billie J Swalla
Journal:  Dev Dyn       Date:  2016-10-25       Impact factor: 3.780

4.  Posterior regeneration in Isodiametra pulchra (Acoela, Acoelomorpha).

Authors:  Elena Perea-Atienza; Maria Botta; Willi Salvenmoser; Robert Gschwentner; Bernhard Egger; Alen Kristof; Pedro Martinez; Johannes Georg Achatz
Journal:  Front Zool       Date:  2013-10-28       Impact factor: 3.172

Review 5.  Beyond Adult Stem Cells: Dedifferentiation as a Unifying Mechanism Underlying Regeneration in Invertebrate Deuterostomes.

Authors:  Cinzia Ferrario; Michela Sugni; Ildiko M L Somorjai; Loriano Ballarin
Journal:  Front Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2020-10-20
  5 in total

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