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Letters to Nature
Nature 422, 901-904 (24 April 2003) | doi:10.1038/nature01539; Received 13 November 2002; Accepted 12 March 2003; Published online 30 March 2003
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Research Assistant Professor, Post-Doctoral Fellow, Statistical Genetic Analyst, and Scientific Programmer Positions in Statistical Human Genetics
- University of Michigan
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Transplanted bone marrow regenerates liver by cell fusion
George Vassilopoulos, Pei-Rong Wang & David W. Russell
- Division of Hematology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA
Correspondence to: David W. Russell Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to D.R. (e-mail: Email: drussell@u.washington.edu).
Abstract
Results from several experimental systems suggest that cells from one tissue type can form other tissue types after transplantation. This could be due to the presence of multipotential or several types of adult stem cells in donor tissues, or alternatively, to fusion of donor and recipient cells. In a model of tyrosinaemia type I, mice with mutations in the fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase gene (Fah-/-) regain normal liver function after transplantation of Fah+/+ bone marrow cells, and form regenerating liver nodules with normal histology that express Fah1. Here we show that these hepatic nodules contain more mutant than wild-type Fah alleles, and that their hepatocytes express both donor and host genes, consistent with polyploid genome formation by fusion of host and donor cells. Using bone marrow cells marked with integrated foamy virus vectors that express green fluorescent protein, we identify common proviral junctions in hepatic nodules and haematopoietic cells. We also show that the haematopoietic donor genome adopts a more hepatocyte-specific expression profile after cell fusion, as the wild-type Fah gene was activated and the pan-haematopoietic CD45 marker was no longer expressed.
- Division of Hematology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA
Correspondence to: David W. Russell Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to D.R. (e-mail: Email: drussell@u.washington.edu).
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