| Literature DB >> 32596359 |
Zhonghong Cao1, Hongjin Liu1, Bosheng Zhao1, Qiuxiang Pang1, Xiufang Zhang1.
Abstract
Planarians are bilaterally symmetric metazoans of the phylum Platyhelminthes. They have well-defined anteroposterior and dorsoventral axes and have a highly structured true brain which consists of all neural cell types and neuropeptides found in a vertebrate. Planarian flatworms are famous for their strong regenerative ability; they can easily regenerate any part of the body including the complete neoformation of a functional brain within a few days and can survive a series of extreme environmental stress. Nowadays, they are an emerging model system in the field of developmental, regenerative, and stem cell biology and have offered lots of helpful information for these realms. In this review, we will summarize the response of planarians to some typical environmental stress and hope to shed light on basic mechanisms of how organisms interact with extreme environmental stress and survive it, such as altered gravity, temperature, and oxygen, and this information will help researchers improve the design in future studies.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32596359 PMCID: PMC7305541 DOI: 10.1155/2020/7164230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1The effects of changed gravity on regenerated tissues in planarian. The left panel indicates that Earth-only planarian fragments regenerated the lost part. The right panel indicates that space-exposed head and tail fragments regenerated the lost parts, but the truncated middle planarian regenerated two heads. The immediate cause and molecular mechanisms are not well known for this phenomenon. Brown marks the original tissue, and white marks the regenerated parts.
Some major advances of the effect of extreme environmental stress on planarians.
| Stress conditions | The main impact on planarian | References |
|---|---|---|
| The effects of gravity and magnetic field | ||
| Microgravity (space) | All the amputated body parts regenerated the lost fragments. | Gorgiladze [ |
| Microgravity (space) | The whole worms had spontaneous fission. The pharynx fragment had regenerated two heads and grew more slowly. Some whole worms showed immediate unusual behavior. The microbiome profiles had changed. | Morokuma et al. [ |
| Microgravity (RPM 60°/s) | The trunk planarians had died. | Adell et al. [ |
| Microgravity (RPM 10°/s) | The trunk planarians appeared normally regenerated. | |
| Hypergravity (LDC 3g, 4g) | The amputated body parts regenerated the missing tissues; the proliferation rate was decreased. | |
| Hypergravity (LDC 8g) | Only the larger trunk planarian fragments can regenerate the lost part. | |
| Microgravity (LG-HMF ug) | The amputated body parts normally regenerated their heads. The worms have a significantly decreased locomotor function. | Lu et al. [ |
| Hypergravity (LG-HMF 2g) | The amputated body parts normally regenerated their heads. | |
| Microgravity (RPM 10°/s) | The body parts properly regenerated head. Cytoskeleton and matrix genes had been downregulated. | Sousa et al. [ |
| Hypergravity (LDC 8g) | The body parts properly regenerated head. Microtubules, cell communication, and cell cycle genes had been downregulated. | |
| Weak magnetic field | The nerve cell proliferation has been accelerated. The regeneration speed increased. The frequency of spontaneous increased. The velocity of movement improved. | Novikov et al. [ |
| Intense magnetic field | The planarian will suddenly die when it is over 6K. | Murugan et al. [ |
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| The effects of oxygen and temperature | ||
| Inhibit ROS | Planarian fragments fail to regenerate the lost parts. The regeneration of cephalic ganglia and ectopic neuronal cells had been restricted. Neoblast differentiation has been restricted. | Pirotte et al. [ |
| Increase ROS | Induce damage of DNA, lipids, and proteins. | Finkel [ |
| Lower temperature (15°C) | The regeneration speed decreased. The spontaneous fission frequency increased. The movement is slow, and the velocity is not stable. The toxic effect of Fe3+ has been decreased. | Ding et al. [ |
| Higher temperature (25-33°C) | The regeneration speed increased. The movement is slow, and the velocity is not stable. The secretory function has been restricted. The capability to eliminate balance increased. | Ding et al. [ |
Figure 2The effects of extreme environmental stress on planarians. Different kinds of extreme environmental factors irritate planarian; organisms sense it and produce the initial signal molecules (yellow star), then recruit more respond factors to join the war and change the metabolism status of different cells and organelles; at last, the organism showed changed regeneration ability, fission frequency, mobility, and immunity.