Artículos de revistas
Generation of mouse-zebrafish hematopoietic tissue chimeric embryos for hematopoiesis and host-pathogen interaction studies
Fecha
2018Registro en:
Disease models & mechanisms, Volumen 11, Issue 11, 2018,
17548411
10.1242/dmm.034876
Autor
Parada-Kusz, Margarita
Penaranda, Cristina
Hagedorn, Elliott J.
Clatworthy, Anne
Nair, Anil V.
Henninger, Jonathan E.
Ernst, Christoph
Li, Brian
Riquelme, Raquel
Jijon, Humberto
Villablanca, Eduardo J.
Zon, Leonard I.
Hung, Deborah
Allende Connelly, Miguel
Institución
Resumen
© 2018. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd. Xenografts of the hematopoietic system are extremely useful as disease models and for translational research. Zebrafish xenografts have been widely used to monitor blood cancer cell dissemination and homing due to the optical clarity of embryos and larvae, which allow unrestricted in vivo visualization of migratory events. Here, we have developed a xenotransplantation technique that transiently generates hundreds of hematopoietic tissue chimeric embryos by transplanting murine bone marrow cells into zebrafish blastulae. In contrast to previous methods, this procedure allows mammalian cell integration into the fish developmental hematopoietic program, which results in chimeric animals containing distinct phenotypes of murine blood cells in both circulation and the hematopoietic niche. Murine cells in chimeric animals express antigens related to (i) hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells, (ii) active cell proliferation and (iii) myeloi