Long-term time-lapse live imaging reveals extensive cell migration during annelid regeneration.
Eduardo E ZattaraKate W TurlingtonAlexandra E BelyPublished in: BMC developmental biology (2016)
Combining neurotoxin-based paralysis, live mounting techniques and a starvation-tolerant study system has allowed us to obtain the most extensive high-resolution longitudinal recordings of full anterior and posterior regeneration in an invertebrate, and to detect and characterize several cell types undergoing extensive migration during this process. We expect the tetrodotoxin paralysis and time-lapse imaging methods presented here to be broadly useful in studying other animals and of particular value for studying post-embryonic development.