Beyond Casual Resemblance: Rigorous Frameworks for Comparing Regeneration Across Species.

IF 11.4 1区 生物学 Q1 CELL BIOLOGY
Mansi Srivastava
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

The majority of animal phyla have species that can regenerate. Comparing regeneration across animals can reconstruct the molecular and cellular evolutionary history of this process. Recent studies have revealed some similarity in regeneration mechanisms, but rigorous comparative methods are needed to assess whether these resemblances are ancestral pathways (homology) or are the result of convergent evolution (homoplasy). This review aims to provide a framework for comparing regeneration across animals, focusing on gene regulatory networks (GRNs), which are substrates for assessing process homology. The homology of the wound-induced activation of Wnt signaling and of adult stem cells provides examples of ongoing studies of regeneration that enable comparisons in a GRN framework. Expanding the study of regeneration GRNs in currently studied species and broadening taxonomic sampling for these approaches will identify processes that are unifying principles of regeneration biology across animals. These insights are important both for evolutionary studies of regeneration and for human regenerative medicine.

超越偶然的相似性:比较物种再生的严格框架。
大多数动物门都有能够再生的物种。比较动物间的再生可以重建这一过程的分子和细胞进化史。最近的研究揭示了再生机制的一些相似性,但需要严格的比较方法来评估这些相似性是祖先途径(同源性)还是趋同进化(同源性)的结果。本综述旨在提供一个比较动物再生的框架,重点关注基因调控网络(grn),这是评估过程同源性的基础。创伤诱导的Wnt信号激活和成体干细胞的同源性为正在进行的再生研究提供了例子,可以在GRN框架内进行比较。在目前研究的物种中扩大再生grn的研究,并扩大这些方法的分类样本,将确定统一动物再生生物学原理的过程。这些见解对再生的进化研究和人类再生医学都很重要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
19.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: The Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, established in 1985, comprehensively addresses major advancements in cell and developmental biology. Encompassing the structure, function, and organization of cells, as well as the development and evolution of cells in relation to both single and multicellular organisms, the journal explores models and tools of molecular biology. As of the current volume, the journal has transitioned from gated to open access through Annual Reviews' Subscribe to Open program, making all articles published under a CC BY license.
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