Apoptotic Cells Activate the “Phoenix Rising” Pathway to Promote Wound Healing and Tissue Regeneration

Authors: 
Li F, Huang Q, Chen J, Peng Y, Roop DR, Bedford JS, Li CY.
Institution: 
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora
Country: 
USA
Year: 
2010
Journal Name: 
Science Signaling

The ability to regenerate damaged tissues is a common characteristic of multicellular organisms. We report a role for apoptotic cell death in promoting wound healing and tissue regeneration in mice. Apoptotic cells released growth signals that stimulated the proliferation of progenitor or stem cells. Key players in this process were caspases 3 and 7, proteases activated during the execution phase of apoptosis that contribute to cell death. Mice lacking either of these caspases were deficient in skin wound healing and in liver regeneration. Prostaglandin E(2), a promoter of stem or progenitor cell proliferation and tissue regeneration, acted downstream of the caspases. We propose to call the pathway by which executioner caspases in apoptotic cells promote wound healing and tissue regeneration in multicellular organisms the "phoenix rising" pathway.

Tissue Type: 
Epidermal
Tissue Info: 

C57BL/6 mice

Species: 
Mouse
CELLnTEC Products: 
Product Use: 

pLEX lentiviral vector system transduction and  Bioluminescence imaging, X-ray irradiation, Bioluminescence imaging of cells implanted in mice

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