Lecture 9 - Regenerative biology Flashcards

1
Q

What is regenerative biology?

A

regeneration is the ability of organisms to restore damaged or diseases structures in form & function

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2
Q

Do hydra use morpholaxis or epimorphosis?

A

morpholaxis

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2
Q

What type of organisms have a really food ability to regenerate (whole body regeneration)?

A

simple (smaller animals)

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2
Q

Do aquatic vertebrates or terrestrial vertebrates have more regenerative capabilities?

A

aquatic (limb, eye, spinal cord, heart)

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3
Q

Do salamander’s limbs use morpholaxis or epimorphosis?

A

epimorphosis

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4
Q

What is morpholaxis?

A

involves using existing cells and repatterning them to incorporate a designated area which will represent the anterior

  • involves de-differentiation and trans-differentiation
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5
Q

What is epimorphosis?

A

involves de differentiation and/or stem cells (proliferation)

  • there is growth (of the missing area
  • the cells at the area which has been cut becomes regenerative cells & proliferation - likely to also have stem cells which can contribute to the growth
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6
Q

How does wounding cause an immediate wound response?

A
  • signals highly conserved, even in plants, to be wounded
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7
Q

What are the early wound responses?

A
  • ATP is released by damaged cells (quick process)
  • Intracellular calcium is elevated (highly conserved as a wound response)
  • reactive oxygen (H2O2 - hydrogen peroxide) is released

These signals act as signals over the first few minutes to initiate the wound response.

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8
Q

What are the 3 steps of the wound response?

A
  1. cytoskeleton changes to close wound. Cells on the edge form “purse strings” to close the wound.
  2. immune cells are recruited from blood stream & skin. Neutrophils identify wound signals and look for bacteria which may have entered due to wound - also triggers the repair of the wound.
  3. initiates regeneration of scar formation (depending on regenerative capabilities) - occurs once wound is sealed off.
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9
Q

What are the 2 results after a wound response?

A
  • regeneration
  • scarring
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10
Q

What is fibrosis?

A

scarring (permanent)

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11
Q

What causes fibrosis (scarring)?

A

caused when fibroblasts secrete high levels of extracellular matrix (collagens)

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12
Q

What are the 4 stages of salamander regeneration?

A
  1. Amputation - early wound signals (development of a stump)
  2. Wound closure - cytoskeletal rearrangements & epithelial movement
  3. Wound epithelium - signaling from wound epithelium to induce de-differentiation (develops hard skin)
  4. Blastema - blastema cell proliferate - then regrowing begins
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13
Q

What is the first sign that regeneration has begun?

A

the formation of a wound epithelium

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14
Q

What is the AER (apical ectodermal ridge)?

A

one of the main signaling centres during limb development

15
Q

What is the blastema formed of?

A

cells that partially de-differentiate

16
Q

Describe the process by which multipotent blastema cells are created?

A

muscle cell can become dedifferentiated before differentiating into different cells (e.g. cartilage, muscle, dermis)

17
Q

What are lineage-restricted blastema cells?

A

cells can only differentiate to the same type of cell

18
Q

What type of blastema cells are found in a salamander?

A

lineage-restricted blastema cells (however some can be multipotent

19
Q

What is an example of whole body regeneration?

A

Planaria - can regenerate from 1/279th of body (0.3%)

20
Q

What is the name given to adult stem cells in planaria?

A

neoblasts - they are scattered throughout the animal (pluripotent)

21
Q

What type of regenerative technique is involved in planaria head regeneration?

A

epimorphosis

22
Q

What type of regenerative technique is used to regenerate from small fragments that results in small animals?

A

morphallaxis

23
Q

What is the name given to adult stem cells in hydra?

A

interstitial cells

24
Q

How do interstitial cells in hydra reproduce?

A

budding

25
Q

If 20% of the ventricle of an adult zebrafish is removed, what would happen?

A

it would regrow

26
Q

Describe the process by which a zebrafish’s heart would regrow?

A
  1. wounding causes activation of the epicardium - a thin layer of cells that encapsulates the heart.
  2. activated epicardium secretes retinoic acid, IGF2 and hedgehog signals.
  3. cardiomyocytes (muscle cells) de-differentiate and proliferate at the wound site.
  4. Vascularisation takes place & the regenerated cardiomyocytes become active.
27
Q

What are 4 features that humans can regenerate?

A
  • bone
  • skin
  • muscle
  • liver
28
Q
A