| Literature DB >> 31355793 |
Lindsay A Dawson1, Regina Brunauer2, Katherine N Zimmel2, Osama Qureshi2, Alyssa R Falck3, Patrick Kim4, Connor P Dolan2, Ling Yu2, Yu-Lieh Lin2, Benjamin Daniel2, Mingquan Yan2, Ken Muneoka2.
Abstract
Here, we present a protocol of adult mouse distal terminal phalanx (P3) amputation, a procedurally simple and reproducible mammalian model of epimorphic regeneration, which involves blastema formation and intramembranous ossification analyzed by fluorescence immunohistochemistry and sequential in-vivo microcomputed tomography (μCT). Mammalian regeneration is restricted to amputations transecting the distal region of the terminal phalanx (P3); digits amputated at more proximal levels fail to regenerate and undergo fibrotic healing and scar formation. The regeneration response is mediated by the formation of a proliferative blastema, followed by bone regeneration via intramembranous ossification to restore the amputated skeletal length. P3 amputation is a preclinical model to investigate epimorphic regeneration in mammals, and is a powerful tool for the design of therapeutic strategies to replace fibrotic healing with a successful regenerative response. Our protocol uses fluorescence immunohistochemistry to 1) identify early-and-late blastema cell populations, 2) study revascularization in the context of regeneration, and 3) investigate intramembranous ossification without the need for complex bone stabilization devices. We also demonstrate the use of sequential in vivo μCT to create high resolution images to examine morphological changes after amputation, as well as quantify volume and length changes in the same digit over the course of regeneration. We believe this protocol offers tremendous utility to investigate both epimorphic and tissue regenerative responses in mammals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31355793 DOI: 10.3791/59749
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis Exp ISSN: 1940-087X Impact factor: 1.355