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Susan V. Bryant, Ph.D.
Vice Chancellor & Professor
University of California
Office of Research
155 Administration
Mail Code: 3175
Irvine, CA 92697
Office Tel: (949) 824-5796
Fax: (949) 824-2095
Email: svbryant@uci.edu
Limb development and regeneration - How to Regenerate a New Leg: What we can learn from salamanders - Alone among vertebrates, urodele amphibians are able to regenerate lost body parts as adults. The key to this ability is that limb cells are triggered to dedifferentiate and reinitiate growth and pattern formation. Our strategy is to use axolotls (Ambystoma mexicanum) to discover the signals that trigger the regeneration response, in the belief that these signals have enormous potential and consequences for human health. Our long term goals are to identify the regeneration-enabling signals in limbs, in order to support progress towards the eventual application of these molecules to the improvement of human repair mechanisms.
In current research, we are using assays derived from the extensive experimental history of regenerating limbs, to test the roles of several signaling molecules known to be essential for limb development. These assays are designed to examine the signals that initiate regeneration, those that are needed to establish a blastema, as well as those that are required for intercalary growth between the new limb tip and the amputation plane. In addition, we are taking a genomics approach to the isolation of genes needed for regeneration. A library of arrayed cDNAs made from limbs at different stages of regeneration will be screened with stage specific probes to identify genes expressed at different times in regeneration. We are especially interested in any novel factors that might be involved in transforming the differentiated limb stump into a blastema. The tools and knowledge are in place to attack complex systems, and understanding regeneration is likely to lead to new approaches and therapies for replacing or repairing lost, damaged or diseased parts of the body.