Chimerism of the Transplanted Heart
New York Medical College · University of Udine
Abstract
Cases in which a male patient receives a heart from a female donor provide an unusual opportunity to test whether primitive cells translocate from the recipient to the graft and whether cells with the phenotypic characteristics of those of the recipient ultimately reside in the donor heart. The Y chromosome can be used to detect migrated undifferentiated cells expressing stem-cell antigens and to discriminate between primitive cells derived from the recipient and those derived from the donor.
We examined samples from the atria of the recipient and the atria and ventricles of the graft by fluorescence in situ hybridization to determine whether Y chromosomes were present in eight hearts from female donors implanted into male patients. Primitive cells bearing Y chromosomes that expressed c-kit, MDR1, and Sca-1 were also investigated.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 49.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Phenotype
- Medicine
- Stem cell
- Immunology
- Heart cells
- Heart transplantation
- Chromosome
- Antigen
- Reduced inequalities