Abstract

Limbs are trunk quintessential in tetrapods. Their development relies on the Retinoic acid (RA) gradient in association with the Fibroblast Growth Factors (FGFs). The role of various FGFs have been probed extensively and confirmed during the induction of ectopic limbs in vertebrates. On such factual backdrops, we studied the expression patterns of FGF2 and FGF10 in the epidermis and mesenchyme by immunohistochemical localization in the regenerating tails of tadpoles of the Indian tree frog, Polypedates maculatus. These tadpoles are known to exhibit a kind of homeotic transformation of tail to limbs during regeneration, whose exact mechanism is still to be established by scientific investigations. Here in this study, we provide the first evidence of the putative involvement of FGF2 and FGF10 during such ectopic appendage development.

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