npj Regenerative Medicine (Jun 2022)

The specialist in regeneration—the Axolotl—a suitable model to study bone healing?

  • A. Polikarpova,
  • A. Ellinghaus,
  • O. Schmidt-Bleek,
  • L. Grosser,
  • C. H. Bucher,
  • G. N. Duda,
  • E. M. Tanaka,
  • K. Schmidt-Bleek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41536-022-00229-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract While the axolotl’s ability to completely regenerate amputated limbs is well known and studied, the mechanism of axolotl bone fracture healing remains poorly understood. One reason might be the lack of a standardized fracture fixation in axolotl. We present a surgical technique to stabilize the osteotomized axolotl femur with a fixator plate and compare it to a non-stabilized osteotomy and to limb amputation. The healing outcome was evaluated 3 weeks, 3, 6 and 9 months post-surgery by microcomputer tomography, histology and immunohistochemistry. Plate-fixated femurs regained bone integrity more efficiently in comparison to the non-fixated osteotomized bone, where larger callus formed, possibly to compensate for the bone fragment misalignment. The healing of a non-critical osteotomy in axolotl was incomplete after 9 months, while amputated limbs efficiently restored bone length and structure. In axolotl amputated limbs, plate-fixated and non-fixated fractures, we observed accumulation of PCNA+ proliferating cells at 3 weeks post-injury similar to mouse. Additionally, as in mouse, SOX9-expressing cells appeared in the early phase of fracture healing and amputated limb regeneration in axolotl, preceding cartilage formation. This implicates endochondral ossification to be the probable mechanism of bone healing in axolotls. Altogether, the surgery with a standardized fixation technique demonstrated here allows for controlled axolotl bone healing experiments, facilitating their comparison to mammals (mice).