Injury is a common occurrence in the life of organisms. Because the extent of damage cannot be predicted, injured organisms must determine how much tissue needs to be restored. It is known that amputation position determines the regeneration speed of amputated appendages in regeneration-competent animals. Yet, it is not clear how positional information is conveyed during regeneration. Here, we investigated tissue dynamics in regenerating caudal fins in the African killifish (Nothobranchius furzeri). We report position-specific, differential modulation of the spatial distribution, duration, and magnitude of proliferation. Regenerating fins profiled by single cell RNA sequencing identified a Transient Regeneration-Activated Cell State (TRACS) that is amplified to match a given amputation position. We located this TRACS to the basal epidermis and found them to express components and modifiers of the extracellular matrix (ECM). We propose a role for these cells in transducing positional information to the regenerating blastema by remodeling the ECM.
Address reprint requests to: Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado
CITATION
A. O. Granillo, D. Zamora, R. R. Schnittker, A. R. Scott, A. Spluga, J. Russell, C. E. Brewster, E. J. Ross, D. A. Acheampong, N. Zhang, K. Ferro, J. A. Morrison, B. Y. Rubinstein, A. G. Perera, W. Wang, A. S. Alvarado, Positional information modulates transient regeneration-activated cell states during vertebrate appendage regeneration. iScience, 110737 (2024).
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