Absence of digit tip regeneration in Lmx1b-deficient nailless digits suggests a role for Lmx1b distinct from patterning

Abstract

Trabajo presentado en el 19th International Congress of Developmental Biology, celebrado en Guia (Portugal) del 16 al 20 de octubre de 2022.Regeneration in mammals is limited to the digit tips. The amputation of the distal tip of the terminal phalanx triggers the formation of an undifferentiated pool of progenitor cells called a blastema that will regenerate the multiple tissues required to restore the missing part. Digit tip regeneration is linked to the presence of the dorsal nail organ, as only amputations that conserve the nail matrix regenerate. However, the regenerative potential of digits without nails has not yet been tested. To evaluate nailless digits, we used dLARM1/2 mutants that develop digits with no nails due to the limb-specific loss of the dorsal limb determinant Lmx1b. We report that dLARM1/2 mutant digits are unable to regenerate, although they form a blastema. To test whether the lack of regeneration was due to the absence of dorso-ventral (DV) polarity, a concept suggested in amphibia, we evaluated Del(27) mutants that also lack DV polarity with nails on both dorsal and ventral aspects of distal phalanges due to ventral overexpression of Lmx1b. Unlike dLARM1/2 mutants, Del(27) mutant digits regenerated indicating that DV polarity is dispensable for regeneration. Interestingly, Lmx1b expression (which continues in the nail dermis postnatally) is detected uniformly in the blastema of WT, but not dLARM1/2 mutant mice. In addition, comparison of dLARM1/2 vs WT blastemal transcriptomes revealed that the mutants had defective pro regenerative processes such as vasculogenesis and extracellular matrix remodeling, while inflammatory pathways were exacerbated. Gene expressions typical of the nail dermis were also lost in dLARM1/2 digit tips, suggesting regulation by Lmx1b. Collectively, our data suggest a direct role for Lmx1b in digit tip regeneration maintaining the nail dermis and promoting a competent blastema

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