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Multi-species atlas resolves an axolotl limb development and regeneration paradox

Jixing Zhong, Rita Aires, Georgios Tsissios, Evangelia Skoufa, Kerstin Brandt, Tatiana Sandoval‐Guzmán, Can Aztekin

2023Nature Communications26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Humans and other tetrapods are considered to require apical-ectodermal-ridge (AER) cells for limb development, and AER-like cells are suggested to be re-formed to initiate limb regeneration. Paradoxically, the presence of AER in the axolotl, a primary model organism for regeneration, remains controversial. Here, by leveraging a single-cell transcriptomics-based multi-species atlas, composed of axolotl, human, mouse, chicken, and frog cells, we first establish that axolotls contain cells with AER characteristics. Further analyses and spatial transcriptomics reveal that axolotl limbs do not fully re-form AER cells during regeneration. Moreover, the axolotl mesoderm displays part of the AER machinery, revealing a program for limb (re)growth. These results clarify the debate about the axolotl AER and the extent to which the limb developmental program is recapitulated during regeneration.

Topics & Concepts

AxolotlRegeneration (biology)Atlas (anatomy)BiologyEvolutionary biologyComputational biologyAnatomyCell biologySingle-cell and spatial transcriptomicsDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationRNA Research and Splicing