4.7 Article

Mesoglea Extracellular Matrix Reorganization during Regenerative Process in Anemonia viridis (Forskal, 1775)

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22115971

Keywords

Anemonia viridis; regeneration; morphology; histology; enzymatic activity; collagen

Funding

  1. FFRCammarata [PJ_RIC_FFABR_2017_004312]
  2. FFR-Parisi [PJ_RIC_FFABR_2017_161753]

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Cnidaria are excellent models for studying regenerative processes due to their anatomical simplicity and ability to regenerate missing body parts, particularly highlighting the importance of mesoglea in the process, acting as a scaffold for tissue regeneration.
Given the anatomical simplicity and the extraordinary ability to regenerate missing parts of the body, Cnidaria represent an excellent model for the study of the mechanisms regulating regenerative processes. They possess the mesoglea, an amorphous and practically acellular extracellular matrix (ECM) located between the epidermis and the gastrodermis of the body and tentacles and consists of the same molecules present in the ECM of vertebrates, such as collagen, laminin, fibronectin and proteoglycans. This feature makes cnidarians anthozoans valid models for understanding the ECM role during regenerative processes. Indeed, it is now clear that its role in animal tissues is not just tissue support, but instead plays a key role during wound healing and tissue regeneration. This study aims to explore regenerative events after tentacle amputation in the Mediterranean anemone Anemonia viridis, focusing in detail on the reorganization of the ECM mesoglea. In this context, both enzymatic, biometric and histological experiments reveal how this gelatinous connective layer plays a fundamental role in the correct restoration of the original structures by modifying its consistency and stiffness. Indeed, through the deposition of collagen I, it might act as a scaffold and as a guide for the reconstruction of missing tissues and parts, such as amputated tentacles.

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