Epidermal downgrowths in regenerating rabbit ear holes
- 1 August 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Morphology
- Vol. 146 (4), 533-542
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jmor.1051460408
Abstract
Rabbits are unique among mammals in that their ears can regenerate tissues from the margins of full thickness holes which grow in and completely fill the opening in about two months. The circular blastema that forms around the edges of the hole differentiates a new sheet of cartilage as it regenerates in a centripetal direction. Similar holes in other mammals fail to regenerate and form scar tissue instead of a blastema. Histological studies of the healing around the edges of rabbit ear holes reveal that during the second week, when the epidermis is completing its migration across the wound from the opposite sides of the ear, conspicuous tongues of epidermal cells grow down into the underlying tissues at the edges of the wound. These epidermal downgrowths are situated between the original intact dermis of the skin and the more central tissues which give rise to the blastema. Such downgrowths are of a transient nature, and are no longer found once the blastema rounds up toward the end of the second week. Since they are not found in the healing of similar wounds in rabbit ears prevented from regenerating by prior removal of their cartilaginous sheets, nor in the naturally nonregenerating ears of sheep and dogs, it is considered that these downgrowths of healing epidermis may play a role in the unusual regenerative response of ear tissues in the rabbit.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tissue Interactions in the Regeneration of Rabbit Ear HolesAmerican Zoologist, 1972
- The effect of mechanical obstruction on tissue regeneration in the rabbit's earBritish Journal of Surgery, 1971
- The collagenolytic enzyme of the regenerating limb of the newtTriturus viridescensDevelopmental Biology, 1970
- Collagenolytic activity in regenerating forelimbs of the adult newt (Triturus viridescens)Developmental Biology, 1968
- Wound healing in the web membrane of the fruit batBritish Journal of Surgery, 1968
- Regeneration of the Caudal Axial Skeleton in a Gekkonid Lizard (Hemidactylus) with Particular Reference to the ‘Latent’ PeriodActa Zoologica, 1967
- Studies on the mechanism of implant-induced supernumerary limb formation in urodeles. I. The histology of supernumerary limb formation in the adult newt, triturus viridescensJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1967
- Tissue replacement in the rabbit's earBritish Journal of Surgery, 1966
- Sex Differences in the Rate of Tissue Regeneration in the Rabbit's EarNature, 1965
- Quelques problèmes de régénération chez les UrodèlesRevue suisse de zoologie., 1955