The wikipedia article only addresses it with a short sentence saying it isn’t a problem usually. There are a lot of denser sources but most go way over my head.
I did think of the idea that incompatible chimeras immune wise simply don’t survive the fetus stage, but I’m not even sure at what point a fetus’s immune system starts functioning.
Natural chimeras (organ transplant recipients being artificial ones) have multiple genomes from the get go, so as the immune system develops it learns that both genomes are “self”. In theory, if you did an organ transplant early enough in pregnancy the recipient’s immune system would likewise come to recognize that foreign DNA as “self”.
Isn’t central tolerance mediated by contact with specific cell types in the marrow and thymus? Depending how a chimera forms, some maturing T and B cells might only encounter other cells from the same genetic type. If that happened there would not be any negative selection against “self”-reactivity to antigens from the other genetic type.
(Caveat: my knowledge of immunology is very, very spotty.)
Yes. If an organism has this much of a fundamental immune conflict during natal development or shortly after birth, it simply wouldn’t survive into childhood.
There are some diseases hypothesized to result from or exacerbated by chimerism, and many known to be directly caused by mosaicism (an organism that contains cells of different genotypes derived from one zygote).