AbstractThe tail of the frog tadpole, comprising spinal cord, muscle, and notochord, regenerates following partial amputation. We show that, in Xenopus, this occurs throughout development, except for a “refractory period” between stages 45 and 47, when tails heal over without regeneration. Regeneration can be enabled during this refractory period by activation of either the BMP or Notch signaling pathways. Conversely, regeneration can be prevented during the later, regenerative, stages by inhibition of either pathway. BMP signaling will cause regeneration of all tissues, whereas Notch signaling activates regeneration of spinal cord and notochord, but not muscle. An activated form of Msx1 can promote regeneration in the same way as BMP signa...
AbstractThe results of recent studies have supported the idea that the ability to organize the forma...
The remarkable regenerative capabilities of amphibians have captured the attention of biologists for...
Understanding the molecular mechanisms that promote successful tissue regeneration is critical for c...
AbstractThe tail of the frog tadpole, comprising spinal cord, muscle, and notochord, regenerates fol...
We have employed transgenic methods combined with embryonic grafting to analyse the mechanisms of re...
AbstractSpinal cord regeneration is very inefficient in humans, causing paraplegia and quadriplegia....
AbstractXenopus laevis tadpoles can regenerate tail, including spinal cord, after partial amputation...
AbstractThe Xenopus tadpole is able to regenerate its tail, including skin, muscle, notochord, spina...
AbstractXenopus tadpoles can fully regenerate all major tissue types following tail amputation. TGF-...
Abstract Background In contrast to mammals, amphibians, such as adult urodeles (for example, newts) ...
The tail of the Xenopus tadpole will regenerate following amputation, and all three of the main axia...
AbstractUrodele amphibians have remarkable organ regeneration ability. They can regenerate not only ...
The ability to regenerate lost tissue and organs varies among animal species, tissue and life cycle ...
The present thesis is a contribution to unravel the molecular mechanisms that underlie urodele regen...
AbstractXenopus laevis can regenerate an amputated limb completely at early limb bud stages, but the...
AbstractThe results of recent studies have supported the idea that the ability to organize the forma...
The remarkable regenerative capabilities of amphibians have captured the attention of biologists for...
Understanding the molecular mechanisms that promote successful tissue regeneration is critical for c...
AbstractThe tail of the frog tadpole, comprising spinal cord, muscle, and notochord, regenerates fol...
We have employed transgenic methods combined with embryonic grafting to analyse the mechanisms of re...
AbstractSpinal cord regeneration is very inefficient in humans, causing paraplegia and quadriplegia....
AbstractXenopus laevis tadpoles can regenerate tail, including spinal cord, after partial amputation...
AbstractThe Xenopus tadpole is able to regenerate its tail, including skin, muscle, notochord, spina...
AbstractXenopus tadpoles can fully regenerate all major tissue types following tail amputation. TGF-...
Abstract Background In contrast to mammals, amphibians, such as adult urodeles (for example, newts) ...
The tail of the Xenopus tadpole will regenerate following amputation, and all three of the main axia...
AbstractUrodele amphibians have remarkable organ regeneration ability. They can regenerate not only ...
The ability to regenerate lost tissue and organs varies among animal species, tissue and life cycle ...
The present thesis is a contribution to unravel the molecular mechanisms that underlie urodele regen...
AbstractXenopus laevis can regenerate an amputated limb completely at early limb bud stages, but the...
AbstractThe results of recent studies have supported the idea that the ability to organize the forma...
The remarkable regenerative capabilities of amphibians have captured the attention of biologists for...
Understanding the molecular mechanisms that promote successful tissue regeneration is critical for c...