| Literature DB >> 24854393 |
Kiyokazu Agata1, Junichi Tasaki2, Elizabeth Nakajima2, Yoshihiko Umesono2.
Abstract
Planarians have strong regenerative abilities derived from their adult pluripotent stem cell (neoblast) system. However, the molecular mechanisms involved in planarian regeneration have long remained a mystery. In particular, no anterior-specifying factor(s) could be found, although Wnt family proteins had been successfully identified as posterior-specifying factors during planarian regeneration (Gurley et al., 2008; Petersen and Reddien, 2008). A recent textbook of developmental biology therefore proposes a Wnt antagonist as a putative anterior factor (Gilbert, 2013). That is, planarian regeneration was supposed to be explained by a single decreasing gradient of the β-catenin signal from tail to head. However, recently we succeeded in demonstrating that in fact the extracellular-signal regulated kinases (ERK) form a decreasing gradient from head to tail to direct the reorganization of planarian body regionality after amputation (Umesono et al., 2013).Entities:
Keywords: Blastema formation; ERK signaling; MAP kinase; Planarian regeneration; Stem cell system
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24854393 DOI: 10.1016/j.zool.2014.04.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zoology (Jena) ISSN: 0944-2006 Impact factor: 2.240