Abstract
ABSTRACTAfter mid-gastric bisection, Hydra regenerates a head from the lower half and a basal disc from the upper one. What signals elicit two distinct regenerative responses in bisected Hydra remains unknown. A mathematical modeling approach based on quantitative data linked to MAPK activation and injury-induced cell death predicts an immediate release of a locally restricted short-lived signal in apical-regenerating tips. We found that Reactive oxygen species (ROS) fulfill this role as evidenced by the injury-induced production of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), three-fold higher in apical-regenerating tips than in basal ones. By contrast, mitochondrial superoxide (mtO2.-) is similarly produced on each side of the cut, playing a positive role on wound healing as mtO2.- scavenging delays healing whereas knocking-down Super Oxide Dismutase (SOD) leads to mtO2.- accumulation and acceleration of wound-healing. In intact Hydra, the ROS-processing enzyme activities are inversely graded along the body column, basal-to-apical for SOD and apical-to-basal for catalase, explaining the asymmetrical levels of H2O2 after bisection. High H2O2 levels trigger injury-induced cell death via paracrine signaling in apical-regenerating tips, where NOX4 and CYBB enzymes amplify them. Hence, the asymmetrical regulation of H2O2 levels immediately after amputation is crucial to activate two distinct regenerative responses in Hydra.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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