Natural chimerism Natural chimerism has been documented in humans in several instances. • The Dutch sprinter
Foekje Dillema was expelled from the 1950 national team after she refused a mandatory sex test in July 1950; later investigations revealed a Y-chromosome in her body cells, and the analysis showed that she was probably a
46,XX/46,XY mosaic female. • In 1953, a human chimera was reported in the
British Medical Journal. A woman was found to have blood containing two different blood types. Apparently this resulted from her twin brother's cells living in her body. A 1996 study found that such blood group chimerism is not rare. • In 2002, an article in the
New England Journal of Medicine described a woman, later identified as Karen Keegan, in whom
tetragametic chimerism was unexpectedly identified after she underwent preparations for kidney transplant. Those preparations for the transplant required the patient and her immediate family to undergo
histocompatibility testing, the result of which had suggested that she was not the biological mother of two of her three children. • In 2002,
Lydia Fairchild was denied public assistance in
Washington state when DNA evidence appeared to show that she was not the mother of her children. A lawyer for the prosecution heard of the case of Karen Keegan in New England, and suggested the possibility to the defense, who were able to show that Fairchild, too, was a chimera with two sets of DNA, and that one of those sets could have produced the children. • In 2009, singer
Taylor Muhl's large torso birthmark was diagnosed as resulting from chimerism.
Non-intentional chimerism related to treatments • Several cases of chimera phenomena have been reported in
bone marrow recipients. • In 2019, the blood and seminal fluid of a man in Reno, Nevada (who had undergone a
vasectomy), exhibited only the genetic content of his bone marrow donor. Swabs from his lips, cheek and tongue showed mixed DNA content. • The DNA content of
semen from an assault case in 2004 matched that of a man who had been in prison at the time of the assault, but who had been a bone marrow donor for his brother, who was later determined to have committed the crime. • In 2008, a man was killed in a traffic accident that occurred in Seoul, South Korea. A DNA analysis to identify him revealed that his blood, along with some of his organs, appeared to show that he was female. It was later determined that he had received a bone marrow transplant from his daughter.
Human-animal chimeras Human-animal chimeras include humans having undergone non-human to human
xenotransplantation, which is the
transplantation of living
cells,
tissues or
organs from one
species to another. • The first stable human-animal chimeras to actually exist were first created by
Shanghai Second Medical University scientists in 2003, the result of having fused human cells with rabbit eggs. • In 2017 researchers led by the
Salk Institute published in
Cell experiments using
CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing to aid in
blastocyst complementation with
pluripotent stem cells in various mammals. The embryo consisted mostly pig cells and some human cells. Scientists stated that they hope to use this technology to address the shortage of donor organs. • In 2021, a human-monkey chimera was created as a joint project between the Salk Institute in the US and
Kunming University in China and published in the journal
Cell. This involved injecting human stem cells into monkey embryos. The embryos were only allowed to grow for a few days, but the study demonstrated that some of these embryos still had human stem cells surviving at the end of the experiments. Because humans are more closely related to monkeys than other animals, it means there is more chance of the chimeric embryos surviving for longer periods so that organs can develop. The project has opened up possibilities into organ
transplantation as well as ethical concerns particularly concerning human brain development in primates. == Chimera identification ==