The Curious Case Of A Human Chimera

In my role as a PhD student in the OPIG group, I integrate and analyse data from various biological, chemical and data sources. As I am interested in the intersection between chemistry, biology and daily life, it seems suitable that my next BLOPIG posts will discuss and highlight how biological phenomena have either influenced law or history.

Connection between Law and Biology – The Curious Case Of A Human Chimera
Our scene opens in a dark lab, where a scientist injects himself with an unknown substance. The voice over notes that they created a monster named “Chimera” while searching for their hero “Bellerophon”.  This scene is the famous opening scene of the movie “Mission Impossible II” , where we are introduced to the dangerous bioweapon “Chimera”, a combination of multiple diseases. As “Chimera” is a mythological beast from Ancient Greek mythology, with a lion’s head, a goat’s body, and a serpent’s tail, the naming of this bioweapon seems appropriate.

What does this dangerous mixture of multiple diseases, an ancient mythological monster and the promised connection between law and biology have in common?

Apart from a really bad joke, the term “Chimera” is an actual term in biology to describe a biological entity of multiple diverse components, e.g. a human organism, whose cells are composed of distinct genotypes.
In case of tetragametic chimerism, human chimeras thus possess forty-six chromosome pairs instead of the “usual” set of twenty-six chromosome pairs, and as such, their organs and tissues are constructed according to the DNA outlined in the respective organ or tissue.
Tetragametic chimerism occurs by the fertilization of two ova by two spermatozoa, which develop into zygotes. These zygotes then subsequently fuse into one organism, which continues to develop into an organism with two sets of DNA.1-2

But how did such a biological phenomenon like a chimera enter the court of law?

The Romans famously defined that the mother of a child is the one who gives birth to it (Mater sempre certa est, which can be translated as “The mother is always certain”).  I would like to point out that in the times of in-vitro fertilization, this principle is no longer viable, since a child can now have both a genetic mother and a birth mother.3
This Principle was disproved in 2002, when Lydia Fairchild applied to receive Welfare for her two children and her third, unborn child, from the US State. Paternity tests were conducted on all children to prove her ex-partner’s paternity. While the tests proved the paternity of the father without a doubt, Lydia was shown to be no genetic match to her children.

Accused of being a “wellfare fraud” or a surrogate, the judge ordered that Lydia Fairchild had to give birth to her third child in front of witnesses. Immediately blood samples were taken, which revealed that Lydia Fairchild also did not share DNA with this child, despite giving birth to it. Now accused of being a surrogate, Lydia’s case looked dire.
Fortunately, Lydia’s lawyer read a journal article about a similar case involving a woman named Kareen Keegan.2, 4-5 Karen, a 52-year old woman, had renal failure. As she needed a kidney replacement, Karen’s sons underwent the histocompability process to test for donation.Yet the genetic tests showed that only one of her three sons was related to her.1 Material from her entire body was tested for genetic matches to her sons’ DNA, but only genetic material of her thyroid matched her sons.2
Ultimately, the researchers concluded that Karen was a tetragametic chimera, born of the fusion of her zygote and her twin sibling in her mother’s womb. As Dr. Lynne Uhl, a pathologist and doctor of transfusion medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, said:
“In her blood, she was one person, but in other tissues, she had evidence of being a fusion of two individuals.”6

Subsequently, scientists collected Lydia’s cell material from various body parts and tested for a genetic match with her children. The DNA from her cervical smear was found to be a match, while the DNA collected from her skin and hair was not. Additionally, DNA samples from Lydia’s mother matched her childrens’ DNA. 4-5

Interestingly, while both Lydia and Karen were carrying two sets of DNA as a result of prenatal fusions with their twins, they didn’t show any phenotypic sign of being a chimera, e.g. different skin types or the so-called Blaschko lines.7-8

 

  1. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/3-human-chimeras-that-already-exist/
  2. To, E. & Report, C. LEADING TO IDENTIFICATION OF TETRAGAMETIC CHIMERISM. 346, (2002).
  3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mater_semper_certa_est
  4. https://pictorial.jezebel.com/one-person-two-sets-of-dna-the-strange-case-of-the-hu-1689290862
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20140301211020/http://www.essentialbaby.com.au/life-style/nutrition-and-wellbeing/when-your-unborn-twin-is-your-childrens-mother-20140203-31woi.html
  6. http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/shes-twin/story?id=2315693
  7. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamadermatology/fullarticle/419529
  8. http://biologicalexceptions.blogspot.co.uk/2015/09/when-youre-not-just-yourself.html

All links were last viewed on the 24.04.2018.

My next blog post: Can a mismatch in maternal DNA threaten a government? How Biology can Influence History.

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