The Maternal-Foetal Interface and Gestational Chimerism: The Emerging Importance of Chimeric Bodies

The science of gestational cell transfer-research into the transfer of cells between a pregnant woman and foetus during gestation-and subsequent mingling of transferred cells, or microchimerism, is bringing new attention to the maternal/foetal interface. These findings challenge previous biological...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inScience as culture Vol. 21; no. 2; pp. 233 - 257
Main Author Kelly, Susan Elizabeth
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Routledge 01.06.2012
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ISSN0950-5431
1470-1189
DOI10.1080/09505431.2011.628014

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Summary:The science of gestational cell transfer-research into the transfer of cells between a pregnant woman and foetus during gestation-and subsequent mingling of transferred cells, or microchimerism, is bringing new attention to the maternal/foetal interface. These findings challenge previous biological understandings of a barrier between the body of a pregnant woman and developing foetus, a barrier maintaining the identity integrity as it were, of two beings, two separate subjects. In this sense, the maternal-foetal interface is an interesting bio-political object, predicated upon understandings of individuals as discrete and bounded organisms, an understanding that has been strongly implicated in immunology, as Donna Haraway, Emily Martin and others have argued. Findings of cellular transfer across this interface raise questions about intermingling and permeability of human organism boundaries. However, these findings are important not only for insight into gestational biology, but because they are emerging in a broader biomedical context of the development of cellular therapies and regenerative medicine. These therapeutic strategies call attention to chimerism as a naturally occurring and iatrogenic biological state, highlighting the permeability and permissiveness of bodies to the intermingling of cells, an idea that runs counter to biological, political and social understandings of selves as individuated, discrete and purely self. A theoretical framework of immuno-politics raises implications of trouble at the maternal/foetal interface, and suggests that chimeric, permeable bodies are of increasing value as cellular therapeutic strategies gain in importance for human health.
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ISSN:0950-5431
1470-1189
DOI:10.1080/09505431.2011.628014