Background: Salamander limb regeneration is a complex biological process that entails the orchestration of multiple cellular and molecular mechanisms in a three-dimensional space. Hence, a comprehensive understanding of this process requires whole-structure level explorations. Recent advances in imaging and optical clearing methods have transformed the study of regenerative phenomena, allowing the three-dimensional visualization of structures and entire organisms.Results: Here we introduce Salamander-Eci, a rapid and robust optical clearing protocol optimized for the widely used axolotl model, which allows simultaneous immunohistochemistry and Click-chemistry detection with minimal volume disruption. We provide examples of its application, from whole larva to adult limbs and organs, and complement it with an image analysis pipeline for volumetric cell quantification. Further, we offer a detailed 3D quantitation of cell proliferation throughout axolotl limb regeneration.Conclusions: Salamander-Eci enables the comprehensive volumetric analysis of regenerative phenomena at both local and systemic levels.
Telomere shortening places a key limitation on cell proliferation1. In all vertebrates explored to date, this limitation is overcome by telomerase-dependent telomere extension. Failure to maintain telomere length results in premature ageing and functional impairments in highly replicative cell populations as telomeres erode2. Alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT), a telomerase-independent mechanism, compensates for telomere loss in a subset of human cancer cell lines 2. Here, we demonstrate that the highly regenerative newt Pleurodeles waltl lacks telomerase activity, contains telomeres distinct from all known vertebrates in both sequence and structure, and deploys ALT for physiological telomere maintenance. This constitutes the first report of telomerase-independent resolution of the end-replication problem at the whole-organism level within Chordata.
Axolotl limb regeneration is accompanied by the transient induction of cellular senescence within the blastema, the structure which nucleates regeneration. The precise role of this blastemal senescent cell (bSC) population, however, remains unknown. Here, through a combination of gain- and loss-of-function assays, we elucidate the functions and molecular features of cellular senescence in vivo. We demonstrate that cellular senescence plays a positive role during axolotl regeneration, by creating a pro-proliferative niche that supports progenitor cell expansion and blastema outgrowth. Mechanistically, these effects are mediated by the provision of Wnt ligands by bSCs. Further, we uncover a link between Wnt signalling and senescence induction, and propose that bSC-derived Wnt signals facilitate the proliferation of neighbouring cells in part by preventing their induction into senescence. This work defines the roles of cellular senescence in regeneration of complex structures.
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