Changes in regeneration-responsive enhancers shape regenerative capacities in vertebrates

Wei Wang(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Chi‐Kuo Hu(Stanford University), An Zeng(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Dana Alegre(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Deqing Hu(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Kirsten Gotting(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Augusto Ortega Granillo(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Yongfu Wang(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Sofia Robb(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Robert R. Schnittker(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Shasha Zhang(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Dillon Alegre(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Hua Li(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Eric J. Ross(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Ning Zhang(Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Anne Brunet(Stanford University), Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado(Stowers Institute for Medical Research)
Science
September 3, 2020
Cited by 233Open Access
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Abstract

Regulatory elements of fish regeneration Some animals regenerate extensively, whereas others, such as mammals, do not. The reason behind this difference is not clear. If the genetic mechanisms driving regeneration are evolutionarily conserved, the study of distantly related species that are subjected to different selective pressures could identify distinguishing species-specific and conserved regeneration-responsive mechanisms. Zebrafish and the short-lived African killifish are separated by ∼230 million years of evolutionary distance and, as such, provide a biological context to elucidate molecular mechanisms. Wang et al. identify both species-specific and evolutionarily conserved regeneration programs in these fish. They also provide evidence that elements of this program are subjected to evolutionary changes in vertebrate species with limited or no regenerative capacities. Science , this issue p. eaaz3090


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