An interspecies barrier to tetraploid complementation and chimera formation.
Tomoyuki YamaguchiHideyuki SatoToshihiro KobayashiMegumi Kato-ItohTeppei GotoHiromasa HaraNaoaki MizunoAyaka YanagidaAyumi UminoSanae HamanakaFabian SuchyHideki MasakiYasunori OtaMasumi HirabayashiHiromitsu NakauchiPublished in: Scientific reports (2018)
To study development of the conceptus in xenogeneic environments, we assessed interspecies chimera formation as well as tetraploid complementation between mouse and rat. Overall contribution of donor PSC-derived cells was lower in interspecies chimeras than in intraspecies chimeras, and high donor chimerism was associated with anomalies or embryonic death. Organ to organ variation in donor chimerism was greater in interspecies chimeras than in intraspecies chimeras, suggesting species-specific affinity differences among interacting molecules necessary for organogenesis. In interspecies tetraploid complementation, embryo development was near normal until the stage of placental formation, after which no embryos survived.