Unlike mammals, adult salamanders possess an intrinsic ability to regenerate complex organs and tissue types, making them an exciting and useful model to study tissue regeneration. The aims of this thesis are two fold, (1) to develop and characterize a reproducible cardiac regeneration model system in the newt, and (2) to decipher the cellular and molecular underpinnings involved in regeneration. In Paper I of this thesis we developed a novel and reproducible heart regeneration model system in the red-spotted newt and demonstrated for the first time the newt’s ability to regenerate functional myocardial muscle, following resection injury, without scarring. The observed findings coincide with an increase in several developmental cardiac tran...
Salamanders exhibit an extraordinary ability among vertebrates to regenerate complex body parts. How...
Different vertebrate species have different cardiac regeneration rates: high in teleost fish, modera...
Imagine losing an eye, an arm or even your spinal cord. When we are wounded, our bodies, and those o...
AbstractUrodele amphibians, like the newt, are the “champions of regeneration” as they are able to r...
Abstract Background The newt Notophthalmus viridescens possesses the remarkable ability to respond t...
Newt hearts are able to repair substantial cardiac injuries without functional impairment, whereas m...
The mammalian heart cannot regenerate substantial cardiac injuries, while certain non-mammalian vert...
Fish model organisms such a Danio rerio have the ability to regenerate heart muscle during its whole...
The newt <i>Notophthalmus viridescens</i>, which belongs to the family of salamanders (Urodela), own...
AbstractUnlike humans, certain adult vertebrates such as newts and zebrafish possess extraordinary a...
In dramatic contrast to the poor repair outcomes for humans and rodent models such as mice, salamand...
Newts can regenerate amputated limbs and cardiac tissue, unlike mammals which lack broad regenerativ...
Adult newt cardiomyocytes, in contrast to their mammalian counterparts, can proliferate after injury...
The epidemic of heart disease, the leading cause of death worldwide, is made worse by the fact that ...
Salamanders exhibit an extraordinary ability among vertebrates to regenerate complex body parts. How...
Different vertebrate species have different cardiac regeneration rates: high in teleost fish, modera...
Imagine losing an eye, an arm or even your spinal cord. When we are wounded, our bodies, and those o...
AbstractUrodele amphibians, like the newt, are the “champions of regeneration” as they are able to r...
Abstract Background The newt Notophthalmus viridescens possesses the remarkable ability to respond t...
Newt hearts are able to repair substantial cardiac injuries without functional impairment, whereas m...
The mammalian heart cannot regenerate substantial cardiac injuries, while certain non-mammalian vert...
Fish model organisms such a Danio rerio have the ability to regenerate heart muscle during its whole...
The newt <i>Notophthalmus viridescens</i>, which belongs to the family of salamanders (Urodela), own...
AbstractUnlike humans, certain adult vertebrates such as newts and zebrafish possess extraordinary a...
In dramatic contrast to the poor repair outcomes for humans and rodent models such as mice, salamand...
Newts can regenerate amputated limbs and cardiac tissue, unlike mammals which lack broad regenerativ...
Adult newt cardiomyocytes, in contrast to their mammalian counterparts, can proliferate after injury...
The epidemic of heart disease, the leading cause of death worldwide, is made worse by the fact that ...
Salamanders exhibit an extraordinary ability among vertebrates to regenerate complex body parts. How...
Different vertebrate species have different cardiac regeneration rates: high in teleost fish, modera...
Imagine losing an eye, an arm or even your spinal cord. When we are wounded, our bodies, and those o...