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American Zoologist 1999 39(3):513-526; doi:10.1093/icb/39.3.513
© 1999 by The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
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Limb Regeneration in the Fiddler Crab, Uca pugilator: Histological, Physiological and Molecular Considerations1

P.M. HOPKINS2, A.C.-K. CHUNG and D.S. DURICA
Department of Zoology, University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma 73019

Correspondence: 2E-mail: Phopkins{at}ou.edu

This paper summarizes our recent work on the histological, physiological and molecular aspects of limb regeneration in the fiddler crab Uca pugilator and new information is presented on mitotic activity in the blastema during the first days of blastemal organization. We also report for the first time the localization of vertebrate growth factor immunoreactivity (FGF 2 and FGF 4) in the regenerating blastema. In the first part of this paper we review recent histological findings concerning the physical events that accompany autotomy of limbs and propose a new function for the autotomy membrane—the tethering of the regenerating pedal nerve to the walls of the coxa. In the second part of the paper we review our recent findings on the identification and characterization of the Uca ecdysteroid receptor (UpEcR, and its potential dimer partner, the retinoid-X-receptor, UpRXR). Using Uca-specific antibody probes raised in our lab, we have been able to identify specific cells in the early blastema that express receptor proteins. The regenerating limb of the fiddler crab is responsive to both steroids and retinoids and mRNA for steroid and retinoid receptors are expressed in the regenerating limb buds during all stages of regeneration. The DNA and deduced amino acid sequences of the ecdysteroid receptor is very similar to the sequences of insect EcRs, while the retinoid receptor is similar to insect protein (ultraspiracle) in the DNA-binding domain, but closer to vertebrate RXRs in the ligand binding domain


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