Human genome-specific real-time PCR method for sensitive detection and reproducible quantitation of human cells in mice

P Song, Z Xie, L Guo, C Wang, W Xie, Y Wu - Stem Cell Reviews and …, 2012 - Springer
P Song, Z Xie, L Guo, C Wang, W Xie, Y Wu
Stem Cell Reviews and Reports, 2012Springer
Xenotransplantation of human cells into immunodeficiency mice has been frequently used to
study stem cells in tissue repair and regeneration and cancer cell metastasis. However, a
sensitive and reproducible method to quantify cell engraftment lacks. Here, we developed a
Real-Time PCR-based method which facilitated consistent detection and quantification of
small amounts of human cells distributed in mouse organs after infusion. The principle of the
method was to directly detect a humans-specific sequence in the human-murine genomic …
Abstract
Xenotransplantation of human cells into immunodeficiency mice has been frequently used to study stem cells in tissue repair and regeneration and cancer cell metastasis. However, a sensitive and reproducible method to quantify cell engraftment lacks. Here, we developed a Real-Time PCR-based method which facilitated consistent detection and quantification of small amounts of human cells distributed in mouse organs after infusion. The principle of the method was to directly detect a humans-specific sequence in the human-murine genomic DNA mixture. In a mouse myocardial infarction model, the Real-Time PCR-based method consistently determined the amounts of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) engrafted into the heart and other organs 7 days after infusion of as little as 2.5 × 105 cells, indicating a high sensitivity, and the amounts of hMSCs detected in mice highly correlated to the numbers of hMSCs transplanted. Importantly, different from previous PCR-based methods, our method produced highly consistent and reproducible results. The reliability of the method was further proven by parallel analyses of DiI-labeled hMSCs in tissue sections and in single cell suspensions of mice. Our data show that the present human genomic DNA-specific primers-based Real-Time PCR method is sensitive and highly reproducible in determining the amount of xenotransplanted human cells in murine tissues.
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