Author/Editor     Goršič, Maša
Title     Axolotl - a supermodel for tissue regeneration
Type     članek
Source     Slov Vet Res
Vol. and No.     Letnik 44, št. 1-2
Publication year     2007
Volume     str. 5-10
Language     eng
Abstract     The process of regeneration -the regrowth of tissue or body part, have been focus of human attention for many centuries. Among vertebrates, the ability to regenerate lost tissue or organs is best. developed in urodele amphibians, such as axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum), which can replace lost tissue throughout adulthood. Axolotl is neotenic amphibian that can regenerate wide range of organs including limbs, tails, gills, heart, spinal cord, jaws. Among the organs they can regenerate, the limb has been most widely studied so that it provides the basis of knowledge about the mechanisms regulating tissue regeneration. Limb regeneration progresses through a series of steps: wound healing, dedifferentiation and re-differentiation. A number of genes involved in the activation of regeneration have been already identified and cloned, but to this moment, exact molecular mechanisms of regeneration process are not yet known. With the new techniques of functional genomics that will help us to identify candidate genes and testing their functions, there are good prospects to discover the whole mystery of regeneration and achieve the ultimate goal - regeneration in mammals.
Descriptors     EXTREMITIES
REGENERATION
WOUND HEALING
CELL DIFFERENTIATION
GENE EXPRESSION REGULATION
URODELA