eLife (Sep 2013)

Tissue absence initiates regeneration through Follistatin-mediated inhibition of Activin signaling

  • Michael A Gaviño,
  • Danielle Wenemoser,
  • Irving E Wang,
  • Peter W Reddien

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00247
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

Read online

Regeneration is widespread, but mechanisms that activate regeneration remain mysterious. Planarians are capable of whole-body regeneration and mount distinct molecular responses to wounds that result in tissue absence and those that do not. A major question is how these distinct responses are activated. We describe a follistatin homolog (Smed-follistatin) required for planarian regeneration. Smed-follistatin inhibition blocks responses to tissue absence but does not prevent normal tissue turnover. Two activin homologs (Smed-activin-1 and Smed-activin-2) are required for the Smed-follistatin phenotype. Finally, Smed-follistatin is wound-induced and expressed at higher levels following injuries that cause tissue absence. These data suggest that Smed-follistatin inhibits Smed-Activin proteins to trigger regeneration specifically following injuries involving tissue absence and identify a mechanism critical for regeneration initiation, a process important across the animal kingdom.

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