In the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus, missing distal parts of the amputated leg are regenerated from the blastema, a population of dedifferentiated proliferating cells that forms at the distal tip of the leg stump. To identify molecules involved in blastema formation, comparative transcriptome analysis was performed between regenerating and normal unamputated legs. Components of JAK/STAT signalling were upregulated more than twofold in regenerating legs. To verify their involvement, Gryllus homologues of the interleukin receptor Domeless (Gb'dome), the Janus kinase Hopscotch (Gb'hop) and the transcription factor STAT (Gb'Stat) were cloned, and RNAi was performed against these genes. Gb'domeRNAi, Gb'hopRNAi and Gb'StatRNAi crickets showed defects in leg regeneration. Blastema expression of Gb'cyclinE was decreased in the Gb'StatRNAi cricket compared with that in the control. Hyperproliferation of blastema cells caused by Gb'fatRNAi or Gb'wartsRNAi was suppressed by RNAi against Gb'Stat. The results suggest that JAK/STAT signalling regulates blastema cell proliferation during leg regeneration. © 2013. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Bando, T., Ishimaru, Y., Kida, T., Hamada, Y., Matsuoka, Y., Nakamura, T., … Mito, T. (2013). Analysis of RNA-seq data reveals involvement of JAK/STAT signalling during leg regeneration in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus. Development (Cambridge), 140(5), 959–964. https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.084590
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