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Publication : Monoclonal mice generated by nuclear transfer from mature B and T donor cells.

First Author  Hochedlinger K Year  2002
Journal  Nature Volume  415
Issue  6875 Pages  1035-8
PubMed ID  11875572 Mgi Jnum  J:97049
Mgi Id  MGI:3574190 Doi  10.1038/nature718
Citation  Hochedlinger K, et al. (2002) Monoclonal mice generated by nuclear transfer from mature B and T donor cells. Nature 415(6875):1035-8
abstractText  Cloning from somatic cells is inefficient, with most clones dying during gestation. Cloning from embryonic stem (ES) cells is much more effective, suggesting that the nucleus of an embryonic cell is easier to reprogram. It is thus possible that most surviving clones are, in fact, derived from the nuclei of rare somatic stem cells present in adult tissues, rather than from the nuclei of differentiated cells, as has been assumed. Here we report the generation of monoclonal mice by nuclear transfer from mature lymphocytes. In a modified two-step cloning procedure, we established ES cells from cloned blastocysts and injected them into tetraploid blastocysts to generate mice. In this approach, the embryo is derived from the ES cells and the extra-embryonic tissues from the tetraploid host. Animals cloned from a B-cell nucleus were viable and carried fully rearranged immunoglobulin alleles in all tissues. Similarly, a mouse cloned from a T-cell nucleus carried rearranged T-cell-receptor genes in all tissues. This is an unequivocal demonstration that a terminally differentiated cell can be reprogrammed to produce an adult cloned animal.
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