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Murine Skin Transplantation
Kym R. Garrod, Michael D. Cahalan
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of California, Irvine

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0:00 Title0

0:10 Introduction10

0:21 Subscription Lock21

0:42 Removal of BALB/C Donor Skin42

2:00 Skin Transplant to Recipient C57bl6120

5:16 Monitoring Rejection316

6:05 Conclusion365

As one of the most stringent and least technically challenging models, skin transplantation is a standard method to assay host T cell responses to MHC-disparate donor antigens. The aim of this video-article is to provide the viewer with a step-by-step visual demonstration of skin transplantation using the mouse model. The protocol is divided into 5 main components: 1) harvesting donor skin; 2) preparing recipient for transplant; 3) skin transplant; 4) bandage removal and monitoring graft rejection; 5) helpful hints. Once proficient, the procedure itself should take <10 min to perform.

 

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Prior to the initiation of experiment:

  • Obtain IACUC approval
  • Sterilize surgical instruments and Q-tips

I. Harvest Donor Tissue

  1. Euthanize donor mouse (in accordance with institution's SOP)
  2. Wet hair back from base of ear with alcohol
  3. Harvest donor skin by cutting ear off at base
  4. Place tissue in plate on ice
  5. Split ear: pinch ventral and dorsal sides of tissue at base of ear with rat-tooth forceps; gently pull apart tissue; float dorsal tissue, internal surface down, in PBS on ice; discard collagenous ventral flap

II. Prepare Recipient for Transplant

  1. Anesthetize mouse using approved procedure
  2. Administer analgesic for post-op pain relief (i.e. 0.05-0.1 mg/g Bupernex ip)
  3. Place mouse in lateral position
  4. Perform toe pinch to ensure animal is sufficiently sedated
  5. Wet hair with alcohol and shave thorax
  6. Wipe area clean with alcohol swab

III. Skin Transplant

  1. Make ~ 1 cm incision: tent skin with rat-tooth forceps and cut ~ 0.25-0.5 cm below forceps
  2. Remove donor skin from PBS, place atop graft bed (with internal surface of ear skin facing graft bed), and remove excess PBS with sterile Q-tip
  3. Carefully trim away excess donor skin so that transplant lies flatly within graft bed (making sure that graft edges are not curled under and that graft does not hangover onto recipient's trunk skin)
  4. Wrap recipient in sterile bandage (with the non-adhesive gauze segment placed over the skin graft)
  5. Ensure that bandage is not too tight (assess animal's breathing) and that arms are freely mobile
  6. Secure bandage with a single 2-0 silk suture
  7. Place animal in clean cage (under heating lamp until animal has sufficiently recovered from anesthesia)
  8. Monitor recipient 1-2/day for signs of distress and administer analgesic as needed for pain relief

IV. Bandage Removal (6-7 days post-transplant)

  1. Anesthetize mouse using approved procedure
  2. Cut and remove silk suture
  3. Using blunt end scissors, carefully cut through bandage (making sure not to disrupt graft) and gently remove
  4. Return mouse to clean cage
  5. Check graft ~8 hrs after bandage removal for signs of scabbing or contraction. If present, graft may have failed to vascularize and should be considered a technical failure.
  6. Monitor daily for signs of rejection (usually defined as ~80% necrosis of the donor tissue)
  7. Allogeneic skin transplants will usually reject between d8-12 post-op

V. Helpful Hints

  1. Harvesting donor tissue close to the base of the ear will: 1) maximize graft size, and 2) provide an uneven ventral overhang that will facilitate splitting
  2. Always use a new razor blade for shaving recipient
  3. If analgesic is to be given ip, administer prior to transplant procedure to minimize post-op handling (minimize chance of disrupting the graft)
  4. If possible, remove gloves before applying the bandage. Gloves tend to stick the bandage and complicate application
  5. Placing a single suture at the bandage end will minimize premature removal
  6. Wrap bandage as tight as permitted and assess breathing BEFORE placing suture. If bandage is too tight, animal will stop breathing. If bandage is too loose, animal will remove it.

As demonstrated in this video-article, the skin transplant model is a quick and easy method for monitoring allogeneic T cell responses. Allogeneic skin transplantation has a wide range of applications and has been utilized to assay the efficiency of a variety of immunosuppressive agents and tolerance induction protocols, as well as to investigate the biological effects of various blocking antibodies.

NIH Immunology Training Grant T32 AI 60573 (KRG) and NIH grant GM 41514 (MDC)

Name  Type  Company  Catalog Number  Comments
Micro-dissecting forceps (curved) Sigma F4142
Rat-tooth forceps (1x2 teeth, straight) Fine Science Tools 11053-10 n=2
Strabismus scissors (blunt end) Fine Science Tools 14074-11
Iris forceps (curved) Fine Science Tools 11065-07
Spring scissors (angled) Fine Science Tools 15006-09
Halsey micro needle holder Fine Science Tools 12500-12
10 cm plates Corning 430167
PBS Cellgro 21-040-CV
Bupernex (Buprenorphine hydrochloride) Reckitt Bencikiser Healthcare 517201
Insulin syringes (29 Ga) Monoject 8881 600145
Q-tips Solon 362
Single edge razor blades (#9) Smith 67-0238
Silk suture (2-0; PS-2) Ethicon 583H
Garrod KR, D. Cahalan M (2008). Murine Skin Transplantation. JoVE. 11. http://www.jove.com/index/details.stp?id=634, doi: 10.3791/634
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01/22/2008 4:34:53 PM
Anonymous responded with a statement of type: Question
Kym, I would really be interested to see a histologic profile of the post-op period - do you have the respective images?
Thank you in advance,
Peter
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01/22/2008 7:33:54 PM
krg responded with a statement of type: Neutral
Dear Peter- Thanks for the great suggestion. I've contacted JoVE to see if a section can be added to the article containing histo pics from allo- and syn- transplants.
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03/28/2008 9:35:43 AM
Merlin responded with a statement of type: Neutral
The connecting speed is too slow, it spends loog time to watch the whole video. Can we download the video?
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03/28/2008 11:09:33 AM
nikitab responded with a statement of type: Neutral

Hi Merlin. I am sorry you are having trouble.  Is it your connection that is slow or ours?  Please use www.speedtest.net to test your connection.  If the problem is on your end, we are now working on a solution to help people with slow connections.  If you would like to discuss this, please send me an email directly to support@jove.com and I'll see what may be the problem.

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03/28/2008 10:04:05 PM
Merlin responded with a statement of type: Neutral

Hi,nikitab. Thank your help. I am from China, I test my connection, the connection is slow from USA to my city. could you tell me how to fix this problem?

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03/28/2008 10:21:12 PM
nikitab responded with a statement of type: Neutral
If you click the pause pause/play button, the video will buffer and you should be able to play it without interruptions after some time.  Hope tihs helps!
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05/15/2008 6:34:17 PM
nikitab responded with a statement of type: Neutral

Merin, just wanted to let you know that we've upgraded the video player.  How are the videos playing now?

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02/03/2009 11:16:53 PM
Duane responded with a statement of type: Neutral

 wow ive learned alot from this can you tell me more about this? is it different from human skin transplants? there is alot going on with stem cell, is this simular, this is intresting, would this maby help people that have bad skin burns?

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02/03/2009 11:25:34 PM
Duane responded with a statement of type: Neutral

 hello this is interesting, is this simular to human skin transplants? does this help people with bad skin burns? theres alot going on with stem cell is this simular? ive learned alot from this vidio, i wait for your answers.

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02/03/2009 11:32:59 PM
Duane responded with a statement of type: Neutral

hello this is interesting, is this simular to human skin transplants? does this help people with bad skin burns?  theres alot going on with stem cell research is this simular? i have learned alot from this vidio, i wait for your answers.

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07/09/2009 7:37:13 PM
caicaidao responded with a statement of type: Question
Hi, Kym, I learn the technique of ear-skin graftting through the video. Well, in the articles about skin graft in mice, most of them just use the method of back-back or tail-back skin transplantation. And do you provide some articles about ear-back skin graft to me? Thank you very much.
cai
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08/05/2009 1:41:14 AM
purnima bhat responded with a statement of type: Agree
beautiful video. we use a similar technique at the Diamantina Institute, but I got some handy hints watching your technique. thanks.
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09/24/2009 12:54:34 PM
Richard responded with a statement of type: Question
Are donor and recipient mice females or males?
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01/16/2008

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Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE) is an online research journal employing visualization to increase reproducibility and transparency in biological sciences.

 

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