In this paper, the authors describe an easy, rapid multiplex polymerase chain reaction to determine the ABO blood group phenotypes of rhesus macaques that can be performed with only small amounts of DNA.
Rhesus macaques are the most common nonhuman primate model organism used in biomedical research. Their increasingly frequent use as subjects in studies involving transplantation requires that blood and other tissue antigens of donors and recipients be compatible. In this paper, the authors report an easy and rapid multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to determine the ABO blood group phenotypes of rhesus macaques that can be performed with only small amounts of DNA. They phenotyped 78 individuals and found this species to exhibit the A, B, and AB phenotypes in frequencies that vary by geographic region. The probability of randomly pairing rhesus macaque donors and recipients that exhibit major ABO phenotype incompatibility is approximately 0.35 and 0.45 for Indian and Chinese rhesus macaques, respectively. (Published Abstracts Provided)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Examining Equity in State Victim Compensation Programs: A Multilevel Analysis
- Decriminalizing or reassembling schools? Implications of removing police from schools for racial and ethnic disparities in criminal justice system contact
- Substance use treatment completion does not mediate the relationship between family treatment court participation and reunification: Results from five courts in the Southwestern U.S.