Genome-wide expression profile of the response to spinal cord injury in Xenopus laevis reveals extensive differences between regenerative and non-regenerative stages

Dasfne Lee-Liu, Mauricio Moreno, Leonardo I. Almonacid, Víctor S. Tapia, Rosana Muñoz, Javier von Marées, Marcia Gaete, Francisco Melo, Juan Larraín*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Xenopus laevis has regenerative and non-regenerative stages. As a tadpole, it is fully capable of functional recovery after a spinal cord injury, while its juvenile form (froglet) loses this capability during metamorphosis. We envision that comparative studies between regenerative and non-regenerative stages in Xenopus could aid in understanding why spinal cord regeneration fails in human beings.

Results: To identify the mechanisms that allow the tadpole to regenerate and inhibit regeneration in the froglet, we obtained a transcriptome-wide profile of the response to spinal cord injury in Xenopus regenerative and non-regenerative stages. We found extensive transcriptome changes in regenerative tadpoles at 1 day after injury, while this was only observed by 6 days after injury in non-regenerative froglets. In addition, when comparing both stages, we found that they deployed a very different repertoire of transcripts, with more than 80% of them regulated in only one stage, including previously unannotated transcripts. This was supported by gene ontology enrichment analysis and validated by RT-qPCR, which showed that transcripts involved in metabolism, response to stress, cell cycle, development, immune response and inflammation, neurogenesis, and axonal regeneration were regulated differentially between regenerative and non-regenerative stages.

Conclusions: We identified differences in the timing of the transcriptional response and in the inventory of regulated transcripts and biological processes activated in response to spinal cord injury when comparing regenerative and non-regenerative stages. These genes and biological processes provide an entry point to understand why regeneration fails in mammals. Furthermore, our results introduce Xenopus laevis as a genetic model organism to study spinal cord regeneration.

Original languageEnglish
Article number12
Pages (from-to)1-20
Number of pages20
JournalNeural Development
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 May 2014

Keywords

  • cell cycle
  • HOX genes
  • immune system
  • inflammation
  • metabolism
  • neurogenesis
  • regenerative organisms
  • RNA-Seq
  • spinal cord regeneration
  • Xenopus laevis

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