Reconstitution of Severe Combined Immunodeficient (SCID) Mice with Cetacean Lymphocytes as a Model to Study Immune Functions in Cetaceans 
    
	Sylvain De Guise; David A. Ferrick
    
	Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, School of Veterinary 
Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, CA
	
    
	Abstract
Mice homozygous for the severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mutation 
lack functional T and B lymphocytes and fail to generate either humoral or cell-mediated 
immunity. The lack of antigen-specific immunity also allows SCID mice to accept allografts and 
xenografts. Immune system from several species, including human, rats, cats, cows, horses and 
pigs, were reconstituted with increasing amount of success into SCID mice. SCID mice models have 
been used for studying the pathogenesis of some diseases as well as for experimental treatments 
of diseases like cancer.
Considering that ethical and technical constraints limit the range of 
experimental immunological studies that can be performed in live cetaceans, there is a need for 
establishing in vivo models in experimental animals that as closely as possible resemble the 
cetacean immune system. In a pilot study, SCID mice were reconstituted with 20 x 106 
killer whale peripheral blood mononuclear celis (PBMC) or with either 20 x 106 or 100 
x 106 splenocytes from a bottlenose dolphin. Mice were sacrificed four weeks after 
reconstitution and spleen and blood were sampled and analyzed for the presence of dolphin B and T 
lymphocytes using flow cytometry. Dolphin T lymphocytes were found in spleen from one out of 3 
mice reconstituted with 100 x 106 splenocytes and in blood of one out of two mice 
reconstituted with killer whale PBMC, one out of three mice reconstituted with 20 x 106 
splenocytes and in two out of three reconstituted with 100 x 106 splenocytes. Dolphin 
B lymphocytes were found only in blood from one out of three mice reconstituted with 20 x 
106 splenocytes.
Cetacean-reconstituted SCID nice represents an attractive model for the study 
of the physiology of cetacean immune response as well as the pathophysiology of naturally 
occurring infectious diseases in captive and wild animals, in addition to represent a unique 
opportunity to test the efficacy of vaccination programs not only through the production of 
antigen-specific immunoglobulins but also by testing the level of protection through challenges 
with the pathogens. A cetacean-SCID model would also allow to address the potential effects of 
exposure to pollutants on the immune system of cetaceans.