Abstract

Although still debated, limb regeneration in salamanders is thought to depend on the dedifferentiation of remnant tissue occurring early after amputation and generating the progenitor cells that initiate regeneration. This dedifferentiation has been demonstrated previously by showing the fragmentation of muscle fibers into mononucleated cells and by revealing the contribution of mature muscle fibers to the regenerates by using lineage-tracing studies. Here, we provide additional evidence of dedifferentiation by showing that Pax7 (paired-box protein-7) transcripts are expressed at the ends of remnant muscle fibers in axolotls by using in situ hybridization and by demonstrating the presence of Pax7+ muscle-fiber nuclei in the early bud and mid-bud stages by means of immunohistochemical staining. During the course of regeneration, the remnant muscles did not progress; instead, muscle progenitors migrated out from the remnants and proliferated and differentiated in the new tissues at an early stage of differentiation. The regenerating muscles and remnant muscles were largely disconnected, and this left a gap between them until extremely late in the late stage of differentiation, at which point the new and old muscles connected together. Notably, Pax7 transcripts were detected in the regions of muscles that faced these gaps; thus, Pax7 expression might indicate dedifferentiation in the remnant-muscle ends and partial differentiation in the regenerating muscles. The roles of this long-duration dedifferentiation in the remnants remain unknown. However, the results presented here could support the hypothesis that long-duration muscle dedifferentiation facilitates the connection and fusion between the new and old muscles that are both in an immature state; this is because immature Pax7+ myoblasts readily fuse during developmental myogenesis.

Highlights

  • Salamanders, including axolotls and newts, exhibit the unique ability to regenerate limbs lost through amputation [1,2,3,4]

  • Pax7 is a transcription factor implicated in the specification of myogenic satellite cells [26,27,28] during the development of skeletal muscle [23,29]

  • in situ hybridization (ISH) showed that in regenerating limbs, Pax7 mRNA was expressed at the distal ends of the remnant muscle cells at the early bud and mid-bud stages (Fig. 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Salamanders, including axolotls and newts, exhibit the unique ability to regenerate limbs lost through amputation [1,2,3,4]. 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU)-incorporation studies demonstrated that retrovirally labeled myotubes reentered the S-phase after implantation [13]. These results suggested that mature muscle fibers at the stump dedifferentiate into proliferating progenitors that contribute to the regeneration. The results obtained added further complexity to the debate: the study showed that muscle fibers contribute to limb regeneration in newts but not axolotls. Muscle regeneration probably depends on resident satellite cells

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