Regional Signaling Controls Stem Cell-Mediated Regeneration in an Invertebrate Chordate
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Many tissues harbor quiescent stem cells that activate after injury, yet how local signals regulate this transition is not well understood. The solitary ascidian Ciona robusta provides a unique model, as upper body fragments regenerate while lower fragments fail to do so. By comparing these regenerative and non-regenerative contexts, we reveal striking differences in transcriptional dynamics and signaling environments. Combining flow cytometry, scRNA-seq, transplantation, and fate mapping, we identified a candidate stem cell population with robust proliferative and differentiation potential following transplantation. However, regenerative capacity does not simply reflect stem cell abundance, but instead depends on region-specific signaling cues. Local expression of metabolic, immune and differentiation-related factors further underscores the importance of spatially distinct environments in shaping outcomes. Our findings show how a shared injury response can diverge into regeneration versus failure, highlighting principles that may be leveraged to enhance tissue repair in other systems.
Highlights
A candidate stem cell population in Ciona robusta was enriched based on ALDH activity.
Transplantation experiments suggest that the cStem population proliferates, differentiates, and maintains a stem-like subset, indicating stem cell identity.
Signaling environment, and not stem cell availability, determines regeneration outcome.
Injury activates a common wound-response transcriptional and cellular program.
JAK1, is differentially induced at regenerated-versus non regenerated body parts.