What is it about?

Haemopoietic stem cells evidently arise in early post-implantation mouse embryos at day 6 of gestation, a day earlier than previously thought (Moore & Metcalf, 1970). Disaggregated embryonic cells were injected into mice given a lethal dose of X-irradiation. The presence of donor haemoglobin (Whitney, 1978) and donor lymphocytic glucose phosphate isomerase (GPI) (Siciliano & Shaw, 1976) to detect donor erythrocytes and lymphocytes, respectively, were monitored by starch gel electrophoresis. The presence of donor cells was also assessed by using donor embryos carrying the T6 marker chromosomes. Decidual cells dissected free of embryos did not colonize any recipients. Disaggregated cells from early mouse embryos first colonized the liver and then repopulated the haemopoietic systems of recipients, producing adult donor haemoglobin within 2-3 days and donor GPI within 3-5 days. 80% of grafted X-irradiated recipients survived and donor markers were found in each of them. All nongrafted controls died within 14 days of X-irradiation and none of them showed donor markers. Disaggregated embryonic cells could be grafted across major histocompatibility barriers unlike adult bone marrow. Haemopoietic stem cells could not be identified in disaggregated cells from embryos aged less than 6 days gestation.

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Why is it important?

It is important because it was the first time experimentally that stem cells derived from the developing embryo were used to treat a disease in a diffferent recipient

Perspectives

This was my first publication ever and it is based on part of PhD thesis at Cambridge University

Professor Peter Hollands
Consultant Clinical Scientist

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This page is a summary of: Differentiation and grafting of haemopoietic stem cells from early postimplantation mouse embryos, Development, January 1987, The Company of Biologists,
DOI: 10.1242/dev.99.1.69.
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