Macrophages Drive Regeneration

The activity of one type of immune cell helps regrow the limbs of amputated salamanders.

Written byEdyta Zielinska
| 1 min read

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AxolotlWIKIMEDIA, STAN SHEBSMacrophages, a type of immune cell that travels throughout tissues gobbling up bacteria and dead cells, plays a pivotal role in limb regeneration in a salamander called the axolotl, according to new research published this week (May 20) in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"There has been a lot of discussion about how cells of the immune system might impinge on the regenerative process,” Andràs Simon of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden told ABC Science. "No one has experimentally addressed this before, so in that sense it's very important."

Macrophages are known to be important in human muscle repair after acute damage. To test their role in limb regeneration in the axolotl, researchers from the Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute depleted macrophages in amputated salamanders and noticed the formation of stumps and scarring, rather than new limbs. When the stump was reamputated and the macrophages replenished, the regenerative program resumed, regrowing the lost limb. The researchers noted that in the first 24 hours after amputation, the macrophages were involved in ...

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