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Molecular Basis for Regenerative Cellular Plasticity

Shannon J. Odelberg
Shannon J. Odelberg
is with the Cardiology Division of the Department of Internal
Medicine at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United
States of America. E-mail: odelberg@howard.genetics.utah.edu
Published August 17,
2004
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pbio.0020232
Copyright:
© 2004 Shannon J. Odelberg. This is an open-access article
distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution
License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and
reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly
cited.
The regeneration of
lost body parts and injured organs has captured the human
imagination since the time of the ancient Greeks. The deep-seated
roots of this early fascination can be seen in Greek mythology. The
many-headed Hydra nearly defeated the hero Heracles by growing two
new heads for every one that Heracles cut off, and the liver of
Prometheus, devoured by a ravenous eagle each night, regenerated
every morning. Aristotle, who lived from 384–322 BC, noted that
the tails of lizards and snakes, as well as the eyes of
swallow-chicks, could regenerate (Aristotle
1965). This fascination became a legitimate area of scientific
inquiry in 1712, when the French scientist René-Antoine Ferchault
de Réaumur published his seminal work on crayfish limb and claw
regeneration (Réaumur 1712).
Soon thereafter, several other prominent scientists of the
eighteenth century, including Abraham Trembley, Charles Bonnet,
Peter Simon Pallas, and Lazzaro Spallanzani, discovered remarkable
regenerative abilities in a variety of organisms. Hydra, earthworms,
and planarians could regenerate their heads and tails (Pallas
1766; Lenhoff and
Lenhoff 1986); salamanders could regenerate their limbs, tails,
and jaws; premetamorphic frogs and toads could regenerate their
tails and legs; slugs could regenerate their horns; and snails could
regenerate their heads (Spallanzani
1769). This last discovery caused quite a stir in
eighteenth-century France, leading to an “unprecedented assault”
on snails as both naturalists and the general public participated in
the quest for scientific knowledge by reproducing Spallanzani's
intriguing results (Newth
1958).
Stem
Cells Versus Dedifferentiation
During the
nineteenth century and for most of the twentieth century,
regeneration research primarily focused on the phenomenology of
regeneration and its cellular basis. Many important discoveries were
made during this period, which led in part to the general conclusion
that progenitor cells are required for most regenerative processes.
However, the origin of these progenitor cells varies between
regenerating systems. In some cases, such as the regeneration of
skin, blood, muscle, and bone in mammals and the replacement of lost
tissues in the flatworm planarian, the progenitor cells pre-exist as
reserve cells or stem cells that only need to be activated in
response to injury or tissue depletion. In other cases, the
progenitor cells can be created de novo through a process in which
fully differentiated cells reverse their normal developmental
processes and revert to proliferating progenitor cells. This latter
process, known as cellular dedifferentiation, is especially
prominent in vertebrates with exceptional regenerative abilities,
such as salamanders. For example, during salamander limb
regeneration, cells from muscle, bone, cartilage, nerve sheath, and
connective tissues participate in the dedifferentiation process to
form a pool of proliferating progenitor cells known as the
regeneration blastema (Figure 1)
(Chalkley 1954; Bodemer
and Everett 1959; Hay and
Fischman 1961; Wallace
et al. 1974; Lo et al. 1993;
Kumar et al. 2000). It
has not yet been determined whether pre-existing stem cells or
reserve cells also contribute to the pool of progenitor cells—nor
whether the blastemal cells are multipotent (capable of
differentiating into multiple cell types), are committed to a
particular cell lineage, or are a mix of multipotent and committed
progenitor cells. Regardless, these blastemal cells will later
redifferentiate to form all the internal tissues of the regenerated
limb other than the peripheral nerve axons. This extraordinary
degree of cellular plasticity distinguishes those vertebrates that
can replace entire anatomical structures, such as limbs, from
vertebrates with more limited regenerative abilities.
The public has
recently exhibited a renewed interest in regeneration research, due
in large part to stem cell research, which has provided promising
avenues for the field of regenerative medicine. In addition,
celebrities such as Christopher Reeve and Michael J. Fox have given
a human face to the many people who could benefit from effective
regenerative therapies. The political, ethical, and religious
controversies surrounding the use of human embryonic stem cells for
therapeutic purposes have only served to increase the public's
awareness of the promising potential of regenerative medicine. But
this interest in using scientific knowledge to enhance the
regenerative capacity in humans is not new. Spallanzani closed his
1768 monograph on regeneration, An Essay on Animal Reproductions,
with a series of questions— which, except for the antiquated
language, could be asked by citizens of the twenty-first century:
But if the abovementioned animals, either aquatic or amphibious,
recover their legs, even when kept on dry ground, how comes it to
pass, that other land animals, at least such as are commonly
accounted perfect, and are better known to us, are not endued with
the same power? Is it to be hoped they may acquire them by some
useful dispositions? [A]nd should the flattering expectation of
obtaining this advantage for ourselves be considered entirely as
chimerical?
Although most of
the current interest in regenerative medicine focuses on the
potential benefits of either embryonic or adult stem cells, there
are several investigators who are now taking an entirely different
approach to the problem. These researchers think that although stem
cells may offer some benefits in the relatively near future, a more
comprehensive approach will be required to meet all of our
regenerative needs. To achieve this goal, they must first learn how
nature has already solved the problem of regeneration and then use
this information to enhance the regenerative capacity in mammals.
These studies seek to understand the biology of regeneration,
especially the cellular and molecular mechanisms that govern
regenerative processes. The experimental systems range from the
unicellular protozoa to complex vertebrates, such as salamanders and
mice.
The
Molecular Biology of Regeneration
With the
technological advances that followed the advent of molecular
biology, researchers acquired the basic tools to begin to unravel
the molecular basis for cellular plasticity and regeneration.
However, progress in this arena has been slow, given that most
organisms with marked regenerative abilities are not yet amenable to
routine genetic manipulation. Recent advances, such as the
application of mutagenic screens to study fin regeneration in
zebrafish (Johnson and
Weston 1995; Poss et al.
2002b) and the application of RNAi knockdown technology to study
regeneration in planarians (Sanchez
Alvarado and Newmark 1999; Newmark
et al. 2003), are quite promising and could largely ameliorate
this deficiency. Nevertheless, results from several recent studies
have converged on a set of genes that appear to play an important
role in regeneration, and evidence is accumulating that suggests
some of these genes may function to control regenerative cellular
plasticity. Three such genes are Msx1, BMP4, and Notch1.
These genes encode, respectively, a transcriptional repressor, a
signaling ligand, and a signaling cell surface receptor.
Numerous studies
over the past three decades have shown that mammals, including
humans, can regenerate their digit tips provided the amputation
plane is distal to the terminal phalangeal joint (Douglas
1972; Illingworth
1974; Borgens 1982;
Singer et al. 1987).
However, Msx1-deficient mice exhibit impaired fetal digit-tip
regeneration, a phenotype that can be rescued in ex vivo cultures in
a dose-dependent manner by application of exogenous BMP4 (Han
et al. 2003). Recently, it has been demonstrated that Xenopus
tadpoles are unable to regenerate their tails during a refractory
period of development between stages 45 and 47 (Beck
et al. 2003). If tails are amputated during this refractory
period, genes that are normally expressed during the early stages of
tadpole tail regeneration, such as BMP4, Msx1, and Notch-1,
are not expressed. However, transgenic frogs carrying a hyperactive
form of Msx1 or constitutively active ALK3 (a receptor
for BMP4) are able to regenerate their tails during the refractory
period. Transgenic frogs carrying a constitutively active Notch-1
receptor will regenerate their notochords and spinal cords but
exhibit little or no muscle regeneration, suggesting that Notch-1
signaling alone cannot rescue complete regenerative capacity in frog
tadpoles (Beck et al. 2003).
Results from expression studies in a variety of organisms are
consistent with these in vivo gene function studies. Msx
genes are upregulated in regenerating salamander limbs and
regenerating zebrafish fins and hearts (Simon
et al. 1995; Poss et al.
2002a; Raya et al. 2003),
while notch-1b and its ligand, deltaC, are upregulated
during zebrafish heart and fin regeneration (Raya
et al. 2003).
Msx1
and Cellular Plasticity
Although these
functional and expression studies indicate that Msx1, Bmp4,
and Notch-1 are important for a variety of regenerative
processes, they do not address the mechanism by which these genes
exert their effects. However, several in vitro studies suggest that Msx1
may be involved in regulating cellular plasticity. Ectopic
expression of Msx1 can inhibit the differentiation of a
variety of mesenchymal and epithelial progenitor cell types (Song
et al. 1992; Hu et al. 2001),
suggesting that this gene may play a role in maintaining cells in an
undifferentiated state. Furthermore, Msx1 may be functioning
not only to prevent differentiation of progenitor cells but also to
induce dedifferentiation of cells that have already differentiated.
Ectopic expression of Msx1 in mouse myotubes (differentiated
muscle cells that are multinucleated and are able to contract),
coupled with serum stimulation, can induce these multinucleated
cells to reduce their levels of myogenic proteins and undergo a cell
cleavage process that produces proliferating mononucleated cells (a
process known as cellularization) (Odelberg
et al. 2000). Clonal populations of these dedifferentiated cells
can redifferentiate into cells expressing markers for cartilage,
fat, and bone cells, as well as myotubes. These results suggest that
the combination of ectopic Msx1 expression and serum
stimulation can induce differentiated muscle cells to
dedifferentiate into proliferating multipotent progenitor cells.
Given this degree of cellular plasticity, it is not surprising that Msx1
can also induce muscle progenitor cells, known as myoblasts, to
dedifferentiate to multipotent progenitor cells (Odelberg
et al. 2000).
Cellularization of
myotubes and myoblast dedifferentiation can also be induced by at
least two synthetic trisubstituted purines. Myoseverin is a
trisubstituted purine that binds to and disassembles microtubules,
leading to the cellularization of multinucleated myotubes (Rosania
et al. 2000). The resulting mononucleated cells proliferate when
stimulated with serum and redifferentiate into myotubes following
serum starvation. A second trisubstituted purine, reversine, induces
myoblasts to dedifferentiate into progenitor cells with adipogenic
and osteogenic potential (Chen
et al. 2004). Therefore, reversine and Msx1 appear to
have a similar effect on mouse myoblasts, although no reports have
yet addressed whether reversine might induce dedifferentiation of
multinucleated myotubes.
In this issue of PLoS
Biology, Kumar et al.
(2004) present data linking Msx1 function to microtubule
disassembly during the process of salamander myofiber
cellularization and fragmentation (myofibers are formed from
myotubes and represent the completely mature form of the
differentiated skeletal muscle cell). Their results suggest that Msx1
expression induces microtubule disassembly, which then leads to
myofiber cellularization or fragmentation. If Msx1 function
is markedly reduced in salamander myofibers by preventing the
efficient synthesis of the Msx1 protein, cellularization or
fragmentation of the myofiber is inhibited, suggesting that Msx1 is
required for this process. Thus, this study complements previous
work (Odelberg et al. 2000)
showing that ectopic Msx1 expression, coupled with serum
stimulation, is sufficient to induce cleavage, cellularization, and
dedifferentiation of mouse myotubes. The two studies point to an
essential role for Msx1 in regenerative cellular plasticity
and when combined with previous in vivo studies, raise the
possibility that BMP or Notch signaling might also play a role in
this process.
Results from these
and other similar studies are beginning to give researchers a
glimpse into the molecular mechanisms that control regeneration and
cellular plasticity. With the new tools available to identify
candidate genes and assess their function, the next few decades
appear promising for scientists engaged in regeneration research.
Elucidating the molecular basis for regeneration may prove to be an
essential step in devising effective methods for enhancing
regeneration in mammals and may well usher in a golden era for
regenerative medicine.
Accession
Numbers
The Mouse Genome
Informatics (http://www.informatics.jax.org/)
accession numbers of the genes discussed in this paper are ALK3
(MGI: 1338938), BMP4 (MGI: 88180), Msx1 (MGI: 97168),
and Notch1 (MGI: 97363). The GenBank (http://www.ncbi.nih.gov/GenBank/)
accession numbers of the genes discussed in this paper are deltaC
(NM 130944), notch1b (Y10352), Ambystoma mexicanum Msx1
(AY525844), Danio rerio msxb (U16311; partial sequence), D.
rerio msxc (NM 131272), Homo sapiens ALK3
(Z22535), and Mus musculus ALK3 (Z23154).
Acknowledgments
Work in our
laboratory on identifying newt genes that regulate cellular
plasticity is supported by grants from the National Institutes of
Health (R01NS43878 and R01NS43878S1).
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