Litcius/Paper detail

Hydrogen peroxide is necessary during tail regeneration in juvenile axolotl

Belfran Alcides Carbonell Medina, Juliana Zapata Cardona, Jean Paul Delgado

2021Developmental Dynamics30 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Background Hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) is a key reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated during appendage regeneration among vertebrates. However, its role during tail regeneration in axolotl as redox signaling molecule is unclear. Results Treatment with exogenous H 2 O 2 rescues inhibitory effects of apocynin‐induced growth suppression in tail blastema cells leading to cell proliferation. H 2 O 2 also promotes recruitment of immune cells, regulate the activation of AKT kinase and Agr2 expression during blastema formation. Additionally, ROS/H 2 O 2 regulates the expression and transcriptional activity of Yap1 and its target genes Ctgf and Areg . Conclusions These results show that H 2 O 2 is necessary and sufficient to promote tail regeneration in axolotls. Additionally, Akt signaling and Agr2 were identified as ROS targets, suggesting that ROS/H 2 O 2 is likely to regulate epimorphic regeneration through these signaling pathways. In addition, ROS/H 2 O 2 ‐dependent‐Yap1 activity is required during tail regeneration.

Topics & Concepts

AxolotlBiologyRegeneration (biology)Hydrogen peroxideJuvenileCell biologyZoologyGeneticsBiochemistryDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZMarine Ecology and Invasive Species