Citation

Dooling KE, Kim RT, Kim EM, Chen E, Abouelela A, Tajer BJ, Lopez NJ, Paoli JC, Powell CJ, Luong AG, Wu SYC, Thornton KN, Singer HD, Savage AM, Bateman J, DiTommaso T, Payzin-Dogru D, Whited JL. 2024. Amputation Triggers Long-Range Epidermal Permeability Changes in Evolutionarily Distant Regenerative Organisms. bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology. Pubmed: 39257748 DOI:10.1101/2024.08.29.610385

Abstract

Previous studies have reported that amputation invokes body-wide responses in regenerative organisms, but most have not examined the implications of these changes beyond the region of tissue regrowth. Specifically, long-range epidermal responses to amputation are largely uncharacterized, with research on amputation-induced epidermal responses in regenerative organisms traditionally being restricted to the wound site. Here, we investigate the effect of amputation on long-range epidermal permeability in two evolutionarily distant, regenerative organisms: axolotls and planarians. We find that amputation triggers a long-range increase in epidermal permeability in axolotls, accompanied by a long-range epidermal downregulation in MAPK signaling. Additionally, we provide functional evidence that pharmacologically inhibiting MAPK signaling in regenerating planarians increases long-range epidermal permeability. These findings advance our knowledge of body-wide changes due to amputation in regenerative organisms and warrant further study on whether epidermal permeability dysregulation in the context of amputation may lead to pathology in both regenerative and non-regenerative organisms.

Related Faculty

Photo of Jessica Whited

Jessica Whited studies limb regeneration in axolotl salamanders. Her lab develops tools to manipulate gene expression during limb regeneration, and explores signaling events following wound healing that initiate the regenerative process.

Search Menu