학술논문

Role of MEKK1 in the anterior‐posterior patterning during planarian regeneration.
Document Type
Article
Source
Development, Growth & Differentiation. Aug2018, Vol. 60 Issue 6, p341-353. 13p.
Subject
*REGENERATION (Biology)
*PHARYNX physiology
*DUGESIA
*RNA interference
*CELLULAR signal transduction
Language
ISSN
0012-1592
Abstract
Planarians have established a unique body pattern along the anterior‐posterior (AP) axis, which consists of at least four distinct body regions arranged in an anterior to posterior sequence: head, prepharyngeal, pharyngeal (containing a pharynx), and tail regions, and possess high regenerative ability. How they reconstruct the regional continuity in a head‐to‐tail sequence after amputation still remains unknown. We use as a model planarian Dugesia japonica head regeneration from tail fragments, which involves dynamic rearrangement of the body regionality of preexisting tail tissues along the AP axis, and show here that RNA interference of the gene D. japonica mek kinase 1 (Djmekk1) caused a significant anterior shift in the position of pharynx regeneration at the expense of the prepharyngeal region, while keeping the head region relatively constant in size, and accordingly led to development of a relatively longer tail region. Our data suggest that DjMEKK1 regulates anterior extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (ERK) and posterior β‐catenin signaling pathways in a positive and negative manner, respectively, to establish a proper balance resulting in the regeneration of planarian's scale‐invariant trunk‐to‐tail patterns across individuals. Furthermore, we demonstrated that DjMEKK1 negatively modulates planarian β‐catenin activity via its serine/threonine kinase domain, but not its PHD/RING finger domain, by testing secondary axis formation in Xenopus embryos. The data suggest that Djmekk1 plays an instructive role in the coordination between the establishment of the prepharyngeal region and posteriorizing of pharynx formation by balancing the two opposing morphogenetic signals along the AP axis during planarian regeneration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]