4.7 Article

A Spatiotemporal Characterisation of Redox Molecules in Planarians, with a Focus on the Role of Glutathione during Regeneration

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11050714

Keywords

planarians; wound healing and tissue regeneration; stem cells; redox molecules; reactive oxygen species; antioxidants

Funding

  1. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) [G.0B83.17N, N1522719, 1522015N]
  2. Bijzonder Onderzoeks Fonds of Hasselt University [BOF16NI03]
  3. European Marine Biological Resource Centre (EMBRC) Belgium-FWO project [GOH3817N, I001219N]

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In this study, in vivo imaging was used to locate and analyze reactive oxygen species (ROS) during different physiological stages in the regenerative planarian Schmidtea mediterranea, revealing a well-equipped redox system in the gut and epidermis. The pharmacological inhibition or RNA interference of the redox balance showed alterations in the regeneration process, affecting tails more significantly. Focusing on glutathione, a reduction in its content led to regenerative failure with tissue lesions and underlying stem cell alterations. This highlights the intertwined relationship between ROS and antioxidants in animal physiology.
A strict coordination between pro- and antioxidative molecules is needed for normal animal physiology, although their exact function and dynamics during regeneration and development remains largely unknown. Via in vivo imaging, we were able to locate and discriminate between reactive oxygen species (ROS) in real-time during different physiological stages of the highly regenerative planarian Schmidtea mediterranea. All ROS signals were strong enough to overcome the detected autofluorescence. Combined with an in situ characterisation and quantification of the transcription of several antioxidant genes, our data showed that the planarian gut and epidermis have a well-equipped redox system. Pharmacological inhibition or RNA interference of either side of the redox balance resulted in alterations in the regeneration process, characterised by decreased blastema sizes and delayed neurodevelopment, thereby affecting tails more than heads. Focusing on glutathione, a central component in the redox balance, we found that it is highly present in planarians and that a significant reduction in glutathione content led to regenerative failure with tissue lesions, characterised by underlying stem cell alterations. This exploratory study indicates that ROS and antioxidants are tightly intertwined and should be studied as a whole to fully comprehend the function of the redox balance in animal physiology.

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