Techniques to study chimerism at the tissue level in humanized mice
Arin Cox, Esha Banerjee, Jillian Verrelle, Elinor Willis, Charles-Antoine Assenmacher, Giovanni Finesso, James C. Tarrant, Enrico Radaelli

TL;DR
This paper presents methods to distinguish human and mouse cells in chimeric mice, aiding in the study of human diseases and immune responses.
Contribution
The paper introduces and validates multiple immunohistochemical techniques for identifying human-derived cells in chimeric mouse tissues.
Findings
HLA-A is the most effective marker for identifying human cells in chimeric mice.
Alternative markers like Ku80 and hMito can be used when HLA-A is not expressed.
Tailored methods help distinguish specific human and mouse immune cell subsets in chimeric tissues.
Abstract
Understanding the origin, distribution, and biology of different cell populations in chimeric mice is critical for interpreting the pathological changes developed in these models. To this aim, the methodological work presented here illustrates the validation and application of a collection of labeling techniques to differentiate between specific mouse and human tissue/cell components in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples from chimeric mice, especially those bearing human tumor and immune cells. First, broad approaches to identify cells of human origin using ubiquitous immunohistochemical targets such as HLA-A, Ku80, and human mitochondrial 60 kDa protein (hMito) were established using specimens from humanized mice and a human tissue microarray including both normal and neoplastic samples. Due to its crisp membranous immunoreactivity, HLA-A was the most useful marker for visual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomics · Cancer Cells and Metastasis · Cell Adhesion Molecules Research
