Possibility of mixed progenitor cells in sea star arm regeneration

B Hernroth, F Farahani, G Brunborg… - … Zoology Part B …, 2010 - Wiley Online Library
Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and …, 2010Wiley Online Library
In contrast to most vertebrates, invertebrate deuterostome echinoderms, such as the sea star
Asterias rubens, undergo regeneration of lost body parts. The current hypothesis suggests
that differentiated cells are the main source for regenerating arm in sea stars, but there is
little information regarding the origin and identity of these cells. Here, we show that several
organs distant to the regenerating arm responded by proliferation, most significantly in the
coelomic epithelium and larger cells of the pyloric caeca. Analyzing markers for proliferating …
Abstract
In contrast to most vertebrates, invertebrate deuterostome echinoderms, such as the sea star Asterias rubens, undergo regeneration of lost body parts. The current hypothesis suggests that differentiated cells are the main source for regenerating arm in sea stars, but there is little information regarding the origin and identity of these cells. Here, we show that several organs distant to the regenerating arm responded by proliferation, most significantly in the coelomic epithelium and larger cells of the pyloric caeca. Analyzing markers for proliferating cells and parameters indicating cell ageing, such as levels of DNA damage, pigment, and lipofuscin contents as well as telomere length and telomerase activity, we suggest that cells contributing to the new arm likely originate from progenitors rather than differentiated cells. This is the first study showing that cells of mixed origin may be recruited from more distant sources of stem/progenitor cells in a sea star, and the first described indication of a role for pyloric caeca in arm regeneration. Data on growth rate during arm regeneration further indicate that regeneration is at the expense of whole animal growth. We propose a new working hypothesis for arm regeneration in sea stars involving four phases: wound healing by coelomocytes, migration of distant progenitor cells of mixed origin including from pyloric caeca, proliferation in these organs to compensate for cell loss, and finally, local proliferation in the regenerating arm. J. Exp. Zool. (Mol. Dev. Evol.) 314B:457–468, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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