The ability of animals to regenerate missing parts is a dramatic and poorly understood aspect of biology. The sources of new cells for these regenerative phenomena have been sought for decades. Recent advances involving cell fate tracking in complex tissues have shed new light on the cellular underpinnings of regeneration in Hydra, planarians, zebrafish, Xenopus, and Axolotl. Planarians accomplish regeneration with use of adult pluripotent stem cells, whereas several vertebrates utilize a collection of lineage-restricted progenitors from different tissues. Together, an array of cellular strategies—from pluripotent stem cells to tissue-specific stem cells and dedifferentiation—are utilized for regeneration
ABSTRACT The existence of multipotent cells in the adult tissues and organs of those vertebrates tha...
The ability to regrow lost or damaged tissues is widespread, but highly variable among animals. Unde...
The review is an overview of the current knowledge of neuronal regeneration properties in mammals an...
The ability of animals to regenerate missing parts is a dramatic and poorly understood aspect of bio...
The ability to restore lost tissues and body regions, a process known as regeneration, is broadly re...
All metazoan phyla contain species that undergo regeneration after amputation. Simple organisms as H...
For ages, regeneration has intrigued countless biologists, clinicians, and biomedical engineers. In ...
How do animals regenerate specialised tissues or their entire body after a traumatic injury, how has...
AbstractUnlike humans, some vertebrate animals are able to completely regenerate damaged appendages ...
Tissue damage can resolve completely through healing and regeneration, or can produce permanent scar...
The existence of multipotent cells in the adult tissues and organs of those vertebrates that are cap...
Abstract Background Dedifferentiation occurs naturally in mature cell types during epimorphic regene...
Over the past decades, genetic analyses performed in vertebrate and invertebrate organisms deciphere...
Planarians are capable of profound regenerative feats dependent upon a population of self-renewing a...
The source of cells which give rise to the new tissues and organs in regeneration has been described...
ABSTRACT The existence of multipotent cells in the adult tissues and organs of those vertebrates tha...
The ability to regrow lost or damaged tissues is widespread, but highly variable among animals. Unde...
The review is an overview of the current knowledge of neuronal regeneration properties in mammals an...
The ability of animals to regenerate missing parts is a dramatic and poorly understood aspect of bio...
The ability to restore lost tissues and body regions, a process known as regeneration, is broadly re...
All metazoan phyla contain species that undergo regeneration after amputation. Simple organisms as H...
For ages, regeneration has intrigued countless biologists, clinicians, and biomedical engineers. In ...
How do animals regenerate specialised tissues or their entire body after a traumatic injury, how has...
AbstractUnlike humans, some vertebrate animals are able to completely regenerate damaged appendages ...
Tissue damage can resolve completely through healing and regeneration, or can produce permanent scar...
The existence of multipotent cells in the adult tissues and organs of those vertebrates that are cap...
Abstract Background Dedifferentiation occurs naturally in mature cell types during epimorphic regene...
Over the past decades, genetic analyses performed in vertebrate and invertebrate organisms deciphere...
Planarians are capable of profound regenerative feats dependent upon a population of self-renewing a...
The source of cells which give rise to the new tissues and organs in regeneration has been described...
ABSTRACT The existence of multipotent cells in the adult tissues and organs of those vertebrates tha...
The ability to regrow lost or damaged tissues is widespread, but highly variable among animals. Unde...
The review is an overview of the current knowledge of neuronal regeneration properties in mammals an...