IntroductionHuman cartilage is an avascular tissue with limited capacity for repair. By contrast, certain lizards are capable of musculoskeletal tissue regeneration following tail loss throughout all stages of their lives. This extraordinary ability is the result of a complex process in which a blastema forms and gives rise to the tissues of the regenerate. Blastemal cells have been shown to originate either from dedifferentiated tissues or from existing progenitor cells in various species, but their origin has not been determined in lizards. As reptiles, lizards are the closest relatives to mammals with enhanced regenerative potential, and the origin of blastemal cells has important implications for the regenerative process. Hence, the aim...
Scar-free wound healing and regeneration are uncommon phenomena permitting the near complete restora...
Lizards are key amniote models for studying organ regeneration. During tail regeneration in lizards,...
AbstractLizards capable of caudal autotomy exhibit the remarkable ability to “drop” and then regener...
Cartilage regeneration is massive during tail regeneration in lizards but little is known about cart...
The epiphysis of femur and tibia in the lizard Podarcis muralis can extensively regenerate after inj...
Abstract: The epiphysis of femur and tibia in the lizard Podarcis muralis can extensively regenerate...
Abstract Background Epimorphic regeneration results i...
Abstract Background Epimorphic regeneration results i...
After bone damage, fracture or amputation, lizards regenerate a variable mass of cartilaginous and f...
After bone damage, fracture or amputation, lizards regenerate a variable mass of cartilaginous and f...
Amputated tails of lizards regenerate while limbs form scars which histological structure is very di...
abstract: While a number of vertebrates, including fishes, salamanders, frogs, and lizards, display ...
Regeneration is the process of regrowth of an injured/missing tissue/organ from the residual tissue....
Reptiles are the only amniotes that maintain the capacity to regenerate appendages. This study prese...
AbstractLizards capable of caudal autotomy exhibit the remarkable ability to “drop” and then regener...
Scar-free wound healing and regeneration are uncommon phenomena permitting the near complete restora...
Lizards are key amniote models for studying organ regeneration. During tail regeneration in lizards,...
AbstractLizards capable of caudal autotomy exhibit the remarkable ability to “drop” and then regener...
Cartilage regeneration is massive during tail regeneration in lizards but little is known about cart...
The epiphysis of femur and tibia in the lizard Podarcis muralis can extensively regenerate after inj...
Abstract: The epiphysis of femur and tibia in the lizard Podarcis muralis can extensively regenerate...
Abstract Background Epimorphic regeneration results i...
Abstract Background Epimorphic regeneration results i...
After bone damage, fracture or amputation, lizards regenerate a variable mass of cartilaginous and f...
After bone damage, fracture or amputation, lizards regenerate a variable mass of cartilaginous and f...
Amputated tails of lizards regenerate while limbs form scars which histological structure is very di...
abstract: While a number of vertebrates, including fishes, salamanders, frogs, and lizards, display ...
Regeneration is the process of regrowth of an injured/missing tissue/organ from the residual tissue....
Reptiles are the only amniotes that maintain the capacity to regenerate appendages. This study prese...
AbstractLizards capable of caudal autotomy exhibit the remarkable ability to “drop” and then regener...
Scar-free wound healing and regeneration are uncommon phenomena permitting the near complete restora...
Lizards are key amniote models for studying organ regeneration. During tail regeneration in lizards,...
AbstractLizards capable of caudal autotomy exhibit the remarkable ability to “drop” and then regener...