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Regeneration in the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi occurs in the absence of a blastema, requires cell division, and is temporally separable from wound healing.

Julia Ramon-MateuS Tori EllisonThomas E AngeliniMark Q Martindale
Published in: BMC biology (2019)
Ctenophore regeneration takes place through a process of cell proliferation-dependent non-blastemal-like regeneration and is temporally separable of the wound healing process. We propose that undifferentiated cells assume the correct location of missing structures and differentiate in place. The remarkable ability to replace missing tissue, the many favorable experimental features (e.g., optical clarity, high fecundity, rapid regenerative performance, stereotyped cell lineage, sequenced genome), and the early branching phylogenetic position in the animal tree, all point to the emergence of ctenophores as a new model system to study the evolution of animal regeneration.
Keyphrases
  • wound healing
  • stem cells
  • cell therapy
  • single cell
  • cell proliferation
  • high resolution
  • induced apoptosis
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • cell cycle arrest
  • genome wide
  • oxidative stress
  • cell death
  • bone marrow
  • high speed