SummaryRegeneration requires both potential and instructions for tissue replacement. In planarians, pluripotent stem cells have the potential to produce all new tissue. The identities of the cells that provide regeneration instructions are unknown. Here, we report that position control genes (PCGs) that control regeneration and tissue turnover are expressed in a subepidermal layer of nonneoblast cells. These subepidermal cells coexpress many PCGs. We propose that these subepidermal cells provide a system of body coordinates and positional information for regeneration, and identify them to be muscle cells of the planarian body wall. Almost all planarian muscle cells express PCGs, suggesting a dual function: contraction and control of pattern...
Muscles are traditionally considered in the context of force generation. Scimone et al. (2017),...
SummaryPlanarians can regenerate any missing body part in a process requiring dividing cells called ...
AbstractRegeneration requires signaling from a wound site for detection of the wound and a mechanism...
Regeneration requires both potential and instructions for tissue replacement. In planarians, pluripo...
Regeneration requires both potential and instructions for tissue replacement. In planarians, pluripo...
Positional information is required for animal regeneration, yet how it is harbored in adult tissues ...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Biology, 2017.Cataloged from PD...
Positional information is required for animal regeneration, yet how it is harbored in adult tissues ...
Regeneration and tissue turnover require new cell production and positional information. Planarians ...
The body-wall musculature of adult planarians consists of intricately organized muscle fibers, which...
Whole-body regeneration requires an organism to produce all missing cell types. The planarian flatwo...
Regeneration, the restoration of body parts after injury, is quite widespread in the animal kingdom....
Planarians are members of the Platyhelminthes (flatworms). These animals have evolved a remarkable s...
Planarians are flatworms that constitutively maintain adult tissues through cell turnover and can re...
Muscles are traditionally considered in the context of force generation. Scimone et al. (2017),...
SummaryPlanarians can regenerate any missing body part in a process requiring dividing cells called ...
AbstractRegeneration requires signaling from a wound site for detection of the wound and a mechanism...
Regeneration requires both potential and instructions for tissue replacement. In planarians, pluripo...
Regeneration requires both potential and instructions for tissue replacement. In planarians, pluripo...
Positional information is required for animal regeneration, yet how it is harbored in adult tissues ...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Biology, 2017.Cataloged from PD...
Positional information is required for animal regeneration, yet how it is harbored in adult tissues ...
Regeneration and tissue turnover require new cell production and positional information. Planarians ...
The body-wall musculature of adult planarians consists of intricately organized muscle fibers, which...
Whole-body regeneration requires an organism to produce all missing cell types. The planarian flatwo...
Regeneration, the restoration of body parts after injury, is quite widespread in the animal kingdom....
Planarians are members of the Platyhelminthes (flatworms). These animals have evolved a remarkable s...
Planarians are flatworms that constitutively maintain adult tissues through cell turnover and can re...
Muscles are traditionally considered in the context of force generation. Scimone et al. (2017),...
SummaryPlanarians can regenerate any missing body part in a process requiring dividing cells called ...
AbstractRegeneration requires signaling from a wound site for detection of the wound and a mechanism...