Background: Nuclear transfer (NT) technologies offer a means for producing the genetically modified pigs necessary to develop swine models for mechanistic studies of disease processes as well as to serve as organ donors for xenotransplantation. Most previous studies have used commercial pigs as surrogates.
Method And Results: In this study, we established a cloning technique for miniature pigs by somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) using Nippon Institute for Biological Science (NIBS) miniature pigs as surrogates.
To elucidate strain differences in the sex reversal of genetic females to phenotypic males, GSP and PNP/DO females were left ovariectomized (ovx) between one to three days after hatching, and the degree of masculinization based on sex-related characters, histological analysis of the right gonad and hormone assay were assessed at one year of age. The GSP and PNP/DO inbred lines were both derived from the Fayoumi breed and are only differentiated based on the red blood cell antigen type carried by each inbred line. Combs and wattles were found to be significantly bigger (P<0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistocompatibility was assessed in the RIR-Y8/NU, BL-E, YL, and WL-G chicken closed colonies by hemagglutination test using anti-red blood cell (RBC) antibodies (HT), skin transplantation test (STT), and formation of isohemagglutinins (FIHs) during STT. The YL individuals all showed the survival of skingrafts for more than 17 days with no FIHs in STT and no RBC antigenic variations in HT, indicating a histocompatible nature together with high homogeneity at serological loci. The BL-E as well as WL-G closed colonies were also found to be histocompatible in the STT with no FIHs, although the HT showed heterogeneities at serological locus/loci other than the B and C blood group loci which have significant effects on histocompatibility or FIHs in chicken.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMiniature pigs have been recognized as valuable experimental animals in various fields such as medical and pharmaceutical research. However, the amount of information on somatic cell cloning in miniature pigs, as well as genetically modified miniature pigs, is much less than that available for common domestic pigs. The objective of the present study was to establish an efficient technique of cloning miniature pigs by somatic cell nuclear transfer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChicken inbred lines of the GSP, GSN/1, PNP/DO and BM-C have been established by selection of a specific allele at the B blood group locus (MHC B-G region) and other polymorphic loci through pedigree mating. To extend the potential of these inbred lines as experimental animals in Aves, we assessed the antigenic homogeneities of the MHC antigens by three immunological methods. Antigenic variations of red blood cells (RBCs) were surveyed in the inbred lines and a random-bred line (NG) derived from the Nagoya breed by using ten kinds of intact antisera produced in the inbred line of chickens against RBCs of a red junglefowl and hybrids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: To safely implant cells into the myocardium, we must establish a volume that prevents compromising cardiac performance. We studied pressure-volume (PV) to investigate the adverse effects of direct cell implantation in the acute phase.
Methods: We used 21 minipigs.
Oligodendrocytes and myelin in the corpus callosum of black tremor and normal hamsters aged over 1.5 years were ultrastructurally examined to determine the myelination index (ratio of myelin thickness/diameter of axon), percentage of naked axons, and proportions of oligodendroglial subtypes (light, medium and dark). The mutant hamsters were remarkably hypomyelinated, with a low myelination index and a high proportion of naked axons, and high proportions of the dark subtypes.
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