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  • Ligament injury in adult zebrafish triggers ECM remodeling and cell dedifferentiation for scar-free regeneration.

Ligament injury in adult zebrafish triggers ECM remodeling and cell dedifferentiation for scar-free regeneration.

NPJ Regenerative medicine (2023-09-20)
Troy Anderson, Julia Mo, Ernesto Gagarin, Desmarie Sherwood, Maria Blumenkrantz, Eric Mao, Gianna Leon, Hailey Levitz, Hung-Jhen Chen, Kuo-Chang Tseng, Peter Fabian, J Gage Crump, Joanna Smeeton
ABSTRACT

After traumatic injury, healing of mammalian ligaments is typically associated with fibrotic scarring as opposed to scar-free regeneration. In contrast, here we show that the ligament supporting the jaw joint of adult zebrafish is capable of rapid and complete scar-free healing. Following surgical transection of the jaw joint ligament, we observe breakdown of ligament tissue adjacent to the cut sites, expansion of mesenchymal tissue within the wound site, and then remodeling of extracellular matrix (ECM) to a normal ligament morphology. Lineage tracing of mature ligamentocytes following transection shows that they dedifferentiate, undergo cell cycle re-entry, and contribute to the regenerated ligament. Single-cell RNA sequencing of the regenerating ligament reveals dynamic expression of ECM genes in neural-crest-derived mesenchymal cells, as well as diverse immune cells expressing the endopeptidase-encoding gene legumain. Analysis of legumain mutant zebrafish shows a requirement for early ECM remodeling and efficient ligament regeneration. Our study establishes a new model of adult scar-free ligament regeneration and highlights roles of immune-mesenchyme cross-talk in ECM remodeling that initiates regeneration.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Monoclonal Anti-Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen antibody produced in mouse, clone PC 10, ascites fluid
Sigma-Aldrich
(Z)-4-Hydroxytamoxifen, ≥98% Z isomer