Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2138639 | Leukemia Research | 2009 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Xenografting of human blood malignancies to immunodeficient SCID mice is a powerful research tool. We evaluate here whether the immunodeficient turkey embryo can also serve as a xenograft host for human blood malignancies. Human leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma lines engrafted robustly into medullary and extramedullary tissues of turkey embryos as detected by PCR, FACS and histology in 8–10 days. Four of eleven patient AML samples also engrafted the bone marrow. Grafts of two lines responded to chemotherapy with doxorubicin. The turkey embryo therefore has the potential to be a complementary xenograft model for the study of human blood malignancies.
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Authors
Igor Grinberg, Arbel Reis, Avivit Ohana, Moran Taizi, Michal Cipok, Sigal Tavor, Deborah Rund, Varda R. Deutsch, Ronald S. Goldstein,