Phagocyte dynamics in a highly regenerative urochordate: Insights into development and host defense
Phagocytosis is a cellular process by which particles and foreign bodies are engulfed and degraded by specialized cells. It is functionally involved in nutrient acquisition and represents a fundamental mechanism used to remove pathogens and cellular debris. In the marine invertebrate chordate Botryl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Developmental biology 2013-02, Vol.374 (2), p.357-373 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Phagocytosis is a cellular process by which particles and foreign bodies are engulfed and degraded by specialized cells. It is functionally involved in nutrient acquisition and represents a fundamental mechanism used to remove pathogens and cellular debris. In the marine invertebrate chordate Botryllus schlosseri, cell corpse engulfment by phagocytic cells is the recurrent mechanism of programmed cell clearance and a critical process for the successful execution of asexual regeneration and colony homeostasis. In the present study, we have utilized a naturally occurring process of vascular parabiosis coupled with intravascular microinjection of fluorescent bioparticles and liposomes as tools to investigate the dynamics of phagocyte behavior in real-time during cyclical body regeneration. Our findings indicate that B. schlosseri harbors two major populations of post-mitotic phagocytes, which display distinct phagocytic specificity and homing patterns: a static population that lines the circulatory system epithelia, and a mobile population that continuously recirculates throughout the colony and exhibits a characteristic homing pattern within mesenchymal niches called ventral islands (VI). We observed that a significant proportion of ventral island phagocytes (VIP) die and are engulfed by other VIP following takeover. Selective impairment of VIP activity curtailed zooid resorption and asexual development. Together, these findings strongly suggest that ventral islands are sites of phagocyte homing and turnover. As botryllid ascidians represent invertebrate chordates capable of whole body regeneration in a non-embryonic scenario, we discuss the pivotal role that phagocytosis plays in homeostasis, tissue renewal and host defense.
► Fluorescent bioparticle microinjection allows phagocytes to be visualized in real time. ► Two phagocyte populations are described with distinct homing properties and substrate specificity. ► Vascular parabiosis experiments performed to uncover roles of phagocytes in whole body regeneration and host defense. ► Mobile phagocyte population is functionally involved in programmed cell clearance and tissue renewal. |
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ISSN: | 0012-1606 1095-564X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ydbio.2012.11.006 |