| Literature DB >> 28950101 |
Jingli Cao1, Jinhu Wang1, Christopher P Jackman2, Amanda H Cox3, Michael A Trembley4, Joseph J Balowski1, Ben D Cox1, Alessandro De Simone5, Amy L Dickson1, Stefano Di Talia5, Eric M Small6, Daniel P Kiehart3, Nenad Bursac2, Kenneth D Poss7.
Abstract
Mechanisms that control cell-cycle dynamics during tissue regeneration require elucidation. Here we find in zebrafish that regeneration of the epicardium, the mesothelial covering of the heart, is mediated by two phenotypically distinct epicardial cell subpopulations. These include a front of large, multinucleate leader cells, trailed by follower cells that divide to produce small, mononucleate daughters. By using live imaging of cell-cycle dynamics, we show that leader cells form by spatiotemporally regulated endoreplication, caused primarily by cytokinesis failure. Leader cells display greater velocities and mechanical tension within the epicardial tissue sheet, and experimentally induced tension anisotropy stimulates ectopic endoreplication. Unbalancing epicardial cell-cycle dynamics with chemical modulators indicated autonomous regenerative capacity in both leader and follower cells, with leaders displaying an enhanced capacity for surface coverage. Our findings provide evidence that mechanical tension can regulate cell-cycle dynamics in regenerating tissue, stratifying the source cell features to improve repair.Entities:
Keywords: endoreplication; epicardium; heart; mechanical tension; polyploidy; regeneration; zebrafish
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28950101 PMCID: PMC5645043 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2017.08.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270