PLoS Computational Biology (Jan 2013)

Comparative RNA-seq analysis in the unsequenced axolotl: the oncogene burst highlights early gene expression in the blastema.

  • Ron Stewart,
  • Cynthia Alexander Rascón,
  • Shulan Tian,
  • Jeff Nie,
  • Chris Barry,
  • Li-Fang Chu,
  • Hamisha Ardalani,
  • Ryan J Wagner,
  • Mitchell D Probasco,
  • Jennifer M Bolin,
  • Ning Leng,
  • Srikumar Sengupta,
  • Michael Volkmer,
  • Bianca Habermann,
  • Elly M Tanaka,
  • James A Thomson,
  • Colin N Dewey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002936
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. e1002936

Abstract

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The salamander has the remarkable ability to regenerate its limb after amputation. Cells at the site of amputation form a blastema and then proliferate and differentiate to regrow the limb. To better understand this process, we performed deep RNA sequencing of the blastema over a time course in the axolotl, a species whose genome has not been sequenced. Using a novel comparative approach to analyzing RNA-seq data, we characterized the transcriptional dynamics of the regenerating axolotl limb with respect to the human gene set. This approach involved de novo assembly of axolotl transcripts, RNA-seq transcript quantification without a reference genome, and transformation of abundances from axolotl contigs to human genes. We found a prominent burst in oncogene expression during the first day and blastemal/limb bud genes peaking at 7 to 14 days. In addition, we found that limb patterning genes, SALL genes, and genes involved in angiogenesis, wound healing, defense/immunity, and bone development are enriched during blastema formation and development. Finally, we identified a category of genes with no prior literature support for limb regeneration that are candidates for further evaluation based on their expression pattern during the regenerative process.