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Fig. 1. The animal used in the study. A small sea cucumber, Eupentacta quinquesemita, is about 5âcm in size. The left side in this figure is oral (anterior), and the right side is aboral (posterior)
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Fig. 2. Internal morphology of regenerating animals. Animals just after evisceration (0 dpe) to 20 dpe were dissected along the body length, at the right side of the mid-ventral ambulacrum and flattened. There are slight color variations of the animals, but specimens at 0, 4, and 10 dpe were fixed with Bouinâs fixative and thus appear yellowish. The animals were about 4â5âcm in length. Black broken line: the edge of mesentery; red solid line: area along the edge of the mesentery, with thickened gut rudiments; black line: grown gut rudiment observable without the microscope
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Fig. 3. Stages of regeneration. Based on the internal morphology of regenerating animals, we defined four stages of regeneration, stages I to IV, and schematic diagrams of each are shown. Blue broken line: the edge of mesentery without regenerating tissues; yellow colored area: regenerating tissues (gut rudiment)
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Fig. 4. Histology of the intact digestive tract. Cross sections of the digestive tract of E. quinquesemita were stained with HE. d, e, f, i, j are high-magnification views of the boxed areas in a, b, c, g, h, respectively. a, d Stomach. Some contents of the stomach are also observed in a. b, e 1st descending intestine. c, f Ascending intestine. g, i 2nd descending intestine. h, j Cloaca. ce, celomic epithelium; ct, connective tissue; cu, cuticle; gd, gonadal duct; le, luminal epithelium; m, muscle; mes, mesentery. Scale bars100 μm in a-c, g, h; 50âμm in d-f, i, j
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Fig. 5. Histology of the tissues at stage I. Cross sections of the body at stage I (0 dpe) were stained with TB, mainly focusing on the anterior (a-d) and posterior (e, f) mesenteries. b, d and g are high-magnification views of the boxed areas in a, c and f, respectively. a, b Anterior tissue, posterior to the anterior rudiment. c, d Anterior tissue posterior than a and b. The gonadal duct remains in the mesentery, but no structures are present at the free end. e Posterior tissue. The cloaca and the body wall are connected by the mesentery. f, g Posterior tissue, anterior than e. In b, d and g, no tubular structures nor developed cell mass are observed at the free edge of the mesentery (arrowhead). bw, body wall; cl, cloaca; gd, gonadal duct; lm, longitudinal muscle; mes, mesentery; wvs: a part of the water vascular system (radial water canals, etc.). Arrowheads indicate the free edges of the mesentery. Scale bars 500âμm in a, c, e; 200âμm in f; 50âμm in b, d, g
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Fig. 6. Histology of the tissues at stage II. Cross sections of the body at stage II (4 dpe) were stained with HE, focusing on the mesentery at the anterior (a, b) and posterior (c, d) regions of the body. a, b Anterior mesentery. A mass of cells is present on the free edge of the mesentery. b is a high-magnification view of the boxed area in a. c Posterior tissue. A thickening of tissue (arrowhead) is observed at the connection of the mesentery and the cloaca. Respiratory trees are an organ continuous from the cloaca, and thus these two tissues could not be strictly distinguished. d Posterior tissue, anterior than c. A part of the mesentery with a free edge is shown. bw, body wall; cl/rt., cloaca or respiratory trees; gd, gonadal duct; lm, longitudinal muscle; mes, mesentery. Scale bars 500âμm in a, c, d; 50âμm in b
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Fig. 7. Histology of the tissues at stage III. Histological sections of the anterior (a-f, i) and posterior (g, h) regions of the body at stage III. b, d, f, h are high-magnification views of the boxed areas in a, c, e, g, respectively. a, b Cross section, 6 dpe, stained with HE. c, d Cross section, 7 dpe, stained with TB. e, f Longitudinal section of the oral region, 7 dpe, stained with TB. The right side of this figure is anterior. g, h Posterior region, 6 dpe, stained with HE. The animal was sliced perpendicular to the oral-aboral axis but a longitudinal section of the regenerating tube was made. In the lumen, a mass of obscure material is observed (arrowhead). bw, body wall; cl, cloaca; gd, gonadal duct; mes, mesentery; rt., respiratory trees. Scale bar 500âμm in a, e, g; 200âμm in c; 50âμm in b, d, h, f
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Fig. 8. Histology of the tissues at stage IV. Cross sections of the body at stage IV focusing on the regenerated digestive tract. Sections a-f were made at positions indicated in g, of a specimen at 17 dpe. h The middle part of the animal with 1st descending, ascending and 2nd descending intestines, at 20 dpe, stained with TB. The slice was made roughly between b and c in a further regenerated animal with a single tube throughout the digestive tract. The 1st descending and ascending intestines could not be distinguished, since the intestines meandered. 1st descending or ascending intestine; 2dp, 2nd descending intestine. Arrowheads indicate mesenteries. Scale bar 50âμm in b-f; 100âμm in a; 200âμm in h
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Fig. 9. Schematic diagram of regeneration of the digestive tube. The internal structure of dissected animals and cross sections at the positions of the dotted lines are illustrated. Organs other than the mesentery and the digestive tract are ommited. a Stage I, just after evisceration. Only the mesentery (gray shaded area) and the cloaca (cl; yellow) remain in the body cavity. b Stage II. A regenerating tissue (gut rudiment) appears at the anterior side as a mass of mainly mesenchymal cells surrounded by coelomic epithelium. c Stage III. Multiple cavities are formed in the anterior regenerating tissue and these coalesce with each other to form lumens. d At stage IV when regeneration is more progressed, the gut rudiment (thickened tissue on the mesentery) becomes continuous between the anterior and posterior sides. The figure shows that the anterior and posterior lumens are not yet connected, but later a single continuous tube is completed. Intestines differentiate according to their position in the digestive tract. In the stomach, a muscle layer (not shown) develops and luminal epithelium (le) is covered with cuticles (cu), as in intact tissues (see Fig. 4a, d). ce: coelomic epithelium; cl: cloaca; cu: cuticles; elt: epithelium-like tissue; le: luminal epithelum
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