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review article

Appendage regeneration is context dependent at the cellular level

Aztekin, Can  
July 28, 2021
Open Biology

Species that can regrow their lost appendages have been studied with the ultimate aim of developing methods to enable human limb regeneration. These examinations highlight that appendage regeneration progresses through shared tissue stages and gene activities, leading to the assumption that appendage regeneration paradigms (e.g. tails and limbs) are the same or similar. However, recent research suggests these paradigms operate differently at the cellular level, despite sharing tissue descriptions and gene expressions. Here, collecting the findings from disparate studies, I argue appendage regeneration is context dependent at the cellular level; nonetheless, it requires (i) signalling centres, (ii) stem/progenitor cell types and (iii) a regeneration-permissive environment, and these three common cellular principles could be more suitable for cross-species/paradigm/age comparisons.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.1098/rsob.210126
Web of Science ID

WOS:000679965000001

Author(s)
Aztekin, Can  
Date Issued

2021-07-28

Publisher

ROYAL SOC

Published in
Open Biology
Volume

11

Issue

7

Article Number

210126

Subjects

Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

•

appendage regeneration

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cross-species

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regeneration

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single-cell-omics

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cellular level

•

xenopus tadpole tail

•

apical ectodermal ridge

•

digit tip regeneration

•

limb regeneration

•

spinal-cord

•

blastema formation

•

epidermal cap

•

zebrafish fin

•

muscle regeneration

•

clonal analysis

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GR-AZTEKIN  
Available on Infoscience
August 14, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/180565
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