Wound repair during arm regeneration in the red starfish Echinaster sepositus |
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Authors: | Yousra Ben Khadra MS Cinzia Ferrario MS Cristiano Di Benedetto PhD Khaled Said PhD Francesco Bonasoro PhD M. Daniela Candia Carnevali MS Michela Sugni PhD |
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Affiliation: | 1. Laboratory of Genetics, Biodiversity and Valorization of Bioresources, Higher Institute of Biotechnology, University of Monastir, Monastir, Tunisia;2. Department of Biosciences, University of Milan, Milan, Italy;3. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Biological and Environmental Sciences and Engineering Division, Thuwal, Saudi Arabia |
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Abstract: | Starfish can regenerate entire arms following their loss by both autotomic and traumatic amputation. Although the overall regenerative process has been studied several times in different asteroid species, there is still a considerable gap of knowledge as far as the detailed aspects of the repair phase at tissue and cellular level are concerned, particularly in post‐traumatic regeneration. The present work is focused on the arm regeneration model in the Mediterranean red starfish Echinaster sepositus; to describe the early cellular mechanisms of arm regeneration following traumatic amputation, different microscopy techniques were employed. In E. sepositus, the repair phase was characterized by prompt wound healing by a syncytial network of phagocytes and re‐epithelialisation followed by a localized subepidermal oedematous area formation. Scattered and apparently undifferentiated cells, intermixed with numerous phagocytes, were frequently found in the wound area during these first stages of regeneration and extensive dedifferentiation phenomena were seen at the level of the stump, particularly in the muscle bundles. A true localized blastema did not form. Our results confirm that regeneration in asteroids mainly relies on morphallactic processes, consisting in extensive rearrangement of the existing tissues which contribute to the new tissues through cell dedifferentiation, redifferentiation, and/or migration. |
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Keywords: | wound healing subepidermal oedematous area repair phase arm regeneration Echinaster sepositus morphallaxis |
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