Q.8 Nude mice refers to (A) mice without skin (B) mice without thymus (C) knockout mice (D) transgenic mice

Q.8 Nude mice refers to
(A) mice without skin (B) mice without thymus
(C) knockout mice (D) transgenic mice

Nude mice are immunodeficient strains characterized by the absence of a functional thymus due to Foxn1 gene mutation, making (B) the correct answer. Their hairless phenotype and T-cell deficiency make them ideal for xenograft studies in cancer research.

Correct Answer

The correct option is (B) mice without thymus. Nude mice (nu/nu) carry a spontaneous Foxn1 mutation causing thymic aplasia, preventing T-lymphocyte maturation and adaptive immunity while retaining limited B/NK cell function. This enables tumor engraftment without rejection.

Option Explanations

Nude mice arise from natural mutation, not genetic engineering, distinguished by specific immunodeficiency.

  • (A) mice without skin: Incorrect; “nude” refers to hairlessness from defective follicles, not skin absence—skin remains intact.

  • (B) mice without thymus: Correct; congenitally athymic with vestigial, nonfunctional thymus lacking thymic epithelium for T-cell education.

  • (C) knockout mice: Incorrect; targeted gene disruption (e.g., Foxn1 KO mimics phenotype) differs from spontaneous nude mutation.

  • (D) transgenic mice: Incorrect; involves foreign gene insertion (e.g., oncogenes), unlike nude’s loss-of-function mutation.

Mechanism Overview

Bone marrow T-progenitors reach nonfunctional thymus, yielding <1% mature T cells (θ-antigen low). B cells hyperactive without T regulation, causing autoantibodies. Used for human tumor xenografts, infectious disease, and immunology.

Feature Wild-type Mice Nude Mice
Thymus Functional  Absent/vestigial 
T Cells Normal Severely deficient 
Fur Present Absent (hairless) 
Applications Controls Xenografts 

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