Biology Open (Jun 2017)

Senescence gives insights into the morphogenetic evolution of anamniotes

  • Éric Villiard,
  • Jean-François Denis,
  • Faranak Sadat Hashemi,
  • Sebastian Igelmann,
  • Gerardo Ferbeyre,
  • Stéphane Roy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1242/bio.025809
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 6
pp. 891 – 896

Abstract

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Senescence represents a mechanism to avoid undesired cell proliferation that plays a role in tumor suppression, wound healing and embryonic development. In order to gain insight on the evolution of senescence, we looked at its presence in developing axolotls (urodele amphibians) and in zebrafish (teleost fish), which are both anamniotes. Our data indicate that cellular senescence is present in various developing structures in axolotls (pronephros, olfactory epithelium of nerve fascicles, lateral organs, gums) and in zebrafish (epithelium of the yolk sac and in the lower part of the gut). Senescence was particularly associated with transient structures (pronephros in axolotls and yolk sac in zebrafish) suggesting that it may play a role in the elimination of these tissues. Our data supports the notion that cellular senescence evolved early in vertebrate evolution to influence embryonic development.

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