Title of article :
Deer antlers: a zoological curiosity or the key to
understanding organ regeneration in mammals?
Author/Authors :
J. S. Price & S. You:، نويسنده , , S. Allen، نويسنده , , C. Faucheux، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Many organisms are able to regenerate lost or damaged body parts that are structural and functional replicates
of the original. Eventually these become fully integrated into pre-existing tissues. However, with the exception of
deer, mammals have lost this ability. Each spring deer shed antlers that were used for fighting and display during
the previous mating season. Their loss is triggered by a fall in circulating testosterone levels, a hormonal change
that is linked to an increase in day length. A complex ‘blastema-like’ structure or ‘antler-bud’ then forms; however,
unlike the regenerative process in the newt, most evidence (albeit indirect) suggests that this does not involve
reversal of the differentiated state but is stem cell based. The subsequent re-growth of antlers during the spring
and summer months is spectacular and represents one of the fastest rates of organogenesis in the animal kingdom.
Longitudinal growth involves endochondral ossification in the tip of each antler branch and bone growth around
the antler shaft is by intramembranous ossification. As androgen concentrations rise in late summer, longitudinal
growth stops, the skin (velvet) covering the antler is lost and antlers are ‘polished’ in preparation for the mating
season. Although the timing of the antler growth cycle is clearly closely linked to circulating testosterone, oestrogen
may be a key cellular regulator, as it is in the skeleton of other male mammals. We still know very little about
the molecular machinery required for antler regeneration, although there is evidence that developmental signalling
pathways with pleiotropic functions are important and that novel ‘antler-specific’ molecules may not exist.
Identifying these pathways and factors, deciphering their interactions and how they are regulated by environmental
cues could have an important impact on human health if this knowledge is applied to the engineering of new
human tissues and organs.
Keywords :
Antler , Bone , Deer , regeneration
Journal title :
Journal of Anatomy Wily
Journal title :
Journal of Anatomy Wily