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Cellular composition and organization of the spinal cord central canal during metamorphosis of the frog Xenopus laevis
Authors:Gabriela Edwards‐Faret  Arantxa Cebrián‐Silla  Emilio E. Méndez‐Olivos  Karina González‐Pinto  José Manuel García‐Verdugo  Juan Larraín
Affiliation:1. Center for Aging and Regeneration, Faculty of Biological Sciences, P. Universidad Católica de Chile, Avenida Libertador Bernardo O'Higgins 340, Santiago, Chile;2. Laboratorio de Neurobiologia Comparada, Instituto Cavanilles, Universidad de Valencia, Valencia 46980, CIBERNED, Valencia, Spain;3. Universidad Arturo Prat del Estado de Chile, Iquique, Chile
Abstract:Studying the cellular composition and morphological changes of cells lining the central canal during Xenopus laevis metamorphosis could contribute to understand postnatal development and spinal cord regeneration. Here we report the analysis of central canal cells at different stages during metamorphosis using immunofluorescence for protein markers expression, transmission and scanning electron microscopy and cell proliferation assays. The central canal was regionalized according to expression of glial markers, ultrastructure, and proliferation in dorsal, lateral, and ventral domains with differences between larvae and froglets. In regenerative larvae, all cell types were uniciliated, have a radial morphology, and elongated nuclei with lax chromatin, resembling radial glial cells. Important differences in cells of nonregenerative froglets were observed, although uniciliated cells were found, the most abundant cells had multicilia and revealed extensive changes in the maturation and differentiation state. The majority of dividing cells in larvae corresponded to uniciliated cells at dorsal and lateral domains in a cervical‐lumbar gradient, correlating with undifferentiated features. Neurons contacting the lumen of the central canal were detected in both stages and revealed extensive changes in the maturation and differentiation state. However, in froglets a very low proportion of cells incorporate 5‐ethynyl‐2′‐deoxyuridine (EdU), associated with the differentiated profile and with the increase of multiciliated cells. Our work showed progressive changes in the cell types lining the central canal of Xenopus laevis spinal cord which are correlated with the regenerative capacities.
Keywords:central canal  ependymal cells  metamorphosis  spinal cord  ultrastructure  Xenopus laevis  RRID:AB_10000325  RRID:AB_2110656  RRID:AB_477499  RRID:AB_10560516  RRID:AB_528507  RRID:AB_261795  RRID:AB_476857  RRID:AB_10693771  RRID:AB_2315078
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