VL14 - Model organism to study regeneration Flashcards
Definition on Regeneration
Regeneration = replacement of a lost or damaged tissue, which includes the structural and functiinal restoration of the organ
e.g: in Hydra
Hydra - freshwater polyp
- Phylum Cnidarians , Class Hydrozoa
- kept as mass cultures at 18°C, fed with brine shrimps
- Hydra vulgaris –> most comonly used
- Genome was sequenced in 2010 by Chapman et. al.
Whole body generation:
* Regenrate whole body parts
* Three diffrent stem cell pools are involved in regeneration
- Ectodermal epthelial cells (unipotent)
- Endodermal (gastrodermal) epithelial clls (unipotent)
- Interstitial stem cells (multipotent) –> migrate to the wound
- Establishment of an organizer (Head and foot)
- Wnt signalling is required for head organization.
- Apoptosis inhibition at foot tip prevents head regeneration
–> Apoptotic cells provide an unexpected source of Wnt3 Signaling to drive hydra head regeneartion. - crosstalk between cell layers and cell types
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITVfXHrfudw
Why is Hydra useful?
- Wound healing
- Developmental processes
- whole body regeneration
- Regeneration from dissociated tissue “natural organoids”
Planaria
- cheap an easy maintanence
- only some are regenerative
- Genome assambly available for S. Mediterranea and D.Japonica
- Stem cell ablation via irradiation
- Transplantation of single-cells and tissue
- Whole body regeneration occurs through neoblasts
Whole body generation:
* Neoblast dpread over whole body
* regerate all organs
* Express piwi1, smedwi-1
* capable of deviding
* can be devided in subclasses
Regenerative capacities in different species
Salamander