• Title of article

    Comparison of Gene Expression Differences After Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury in Zebrafish, lt;i gt;Xenopus laevis lt;/i gt;, and Planarians: A Systematic Review

  • Author/Authors

    Noorimotlagh ، Zeynab School of Medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Mousavi Nasab ، Mohammad Mehdi Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences , Sahebdel ، Faezeh Department of Rehabilitation Medicine - University of Minnesota Medical School , Khosravi-Largani ، Matin School of Medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Jangholi ، Ehsan Department of Neurosurgery - Shariati Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Jahanbakhshi ، Amin Department of Neurosurgery - Skull Base Research Center, Hazrat Rasoul Akram Hospital - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Ghodsi ، Zahra Sina Trauma and Surgery Research Center (STSRC) - Tehran University of Medical Sciences (TUMS) , Atlasi ، Rasha Non-communicable Diseases Research Center, Endocrinology and Metabolism Population Sciences Institute, Endocrinology and Metabolism Research Center, Endocrinology and Metabolism Clinical Sciences Institute - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Vaccaro ، Alexander Rothman Institute - Thomas Jefferson University , Rahimi-Movaghar ، Vafa Sina Trauma and Surgery Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences

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    1
  • To page
    15
  • Abstract
    Context: Planarians, zebrafish, and Xenopus laevisare able to mend damage to their spinal cords after they have been damaged. After undergoing metamorphosis, the X. laevisloses the ability to do this. This study examines the genes that are involved in the process of spinal cord regeneration in these animals, investigates the pattern of their expression at various stages after spinal cord injury (SCI), and compares them to animals that do not have the ability to regenerate their spinal cords. This study reviews gene-based studies in regenerative animals, such as zebrafish, X. laevis, and planarians, and compares their expression patterns and fold-change slopes to non-regenerative ones to identify SCI recovery milestones. Evidence Acquisition: A systematic search was carried out with the intention of including all of the studies that had been conducted on the gene expression of X. laevis, zebrafish, and planarians in the context of SCI. Studies have been transferred to Endnote 2019 software. The researchers used the software to remove duplicate studies. Two researchers then assessed the titles and abstracts. A neutral third party resolved the discrepancies and extracted the data to a predesigned Microsoft Excel Worksheet. The genes were retrieved, and the data from the genome-wide studies were also combined to identify genes whose expression patterns in non-regenerative and regenerative species were significantly comparable or disagreeing with one another. Results: This review included 45 original and 2 genome-wide studies. Overall, 112 genes and their pathways were extracted. A total of 238 genes were common in these studies, and 9 significant expression patterns were possible. Among these 238 common genes, genes 23, 9, and 4 followed 4, 5, and 6 of these significant patterns, respectively. Additionally, pooling the genome-wide studies yielded 15 significant genes, with similar patterns in zebrafish and regenerative X. laevisand conflicting patterns between them and non-regenerative X. laevis. Conclusions: The regeneration of the spinal cord involves several processes, including regulation of inflammation, promotion of glial cell proliferation, facilitation of neuroplasticity, and establishment of coordination between newly formed neurons. Genes such as FOXN4, STC1, HSPA5, EGFR, and PRTFDC1 are also important. MCAM and Dkkb genes must be timed to create the right microenvironment for SCI healing in regenerating X. laevisand zebrafish. However, humans and non-regenerative X. laevisshare an insufficient microenvironment. In contrast to non-regenerative models of SCI, regenerative animals decrease early-phase agents and increase injury site neuroplasticity in the late phase. As they show parallel expression patterns in regenerative and non-regenerative animals but in competition with one another.
  • Keywords
    Spinal Cord Injuries , Spinal Cord Regeneration , Xenopus laevis , Zebrafish , Planarians
  • Journal title
    Archives of Neuroscience
  • Journal title
    Archives of Neuroscience
  • Record number

    2759195