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by ronaldx
4385 days ago
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This article doesn't totally add up. If the mother was chimeric, she would be chimeric with a 'twin' from the same (grand)mother and father. Therefore her 'twin' chimera would share 50% of her DNA, as any regular sibling. This would be identifiable on a DNA test as a close relative: she would be genetically equivalent to an aunt rather than a mother. It's also surprising that they had to test the thyroid when the gametic cell line is the important one (wikipedia suggests they tested her cervix). |
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They got lucky with the thyroid test in the Boston (Keegan) case. The chimeric cells can be anywhere, in any proportions. (There's no guarantee the complete thyroid, or complete ovary is a single genome... so the 'luck of the stick' could change the results.)