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In Vivo Imaging of Epithelial Wound Healing in the Cnidarian Clytia Hemisphaerica Demonstrates Early Evolution of Purse String and Cell Crawling Closure Mechanisms

Zach Kamran, Katie Zellner, Harry Kyriazes, Christine M. Kraus,Jean-Baptiste Reynier,Jocelyn E. Malamy

BMC developmental biology(2017)

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摘要
All animals have mechanisms for healing damage to the epithelial sheets that cover the body and line internal cavities. Epithelial wounds heal either by cells crawling over the wound gap, by contraction of a super-cellular actin cable (“purse string”) that surrounds the wound, or some combination of the two mechanisms. Both cell crawling and purse string closure of epithelial wounds are widely observed across vertebrates and invertebrates, suggesting early evolution of these mechanisms. Cnidarians evolved ~600 million years ago and are considered a sister group to the Bilateria. They have been much studied for their tremendous regenerative potential, but epithelial wound healing has not been characterized in detail. Conserved elements of wound healing in bilaterians and cnidarians would suggest an evolutionary origin in a common ancestor. Here we test this idea by characterizing epithelial wound healing in live medusae of Clytia hemisphaerica.
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关键词
Cnidaria,Epithelial wound healing,Basement membrane,Purse string,Cell crawling,Clytia
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