Microchimérisme : mélange de cellules génétiquement distinctes dans le même corps.
Une femme qui accouche d’enfants qui sont génétiquement parlant ses neveux, des cellules d’origine foetale qui battent dans le coeur d’une mère et des cellules de grand-mères retrouvées dans le sang de nouveau-nés : autant d’exemples de folles histoires liées au microchimérisme, ce phénomène biologique que nous commençons tout juste à explorer.
Il y a une vingtaine d’années, la découverte du microbiote nous révélait que nous
étions à moitié constitués de micro-organismes. Nous réalisons aujourd’hui que même nos cellules humaines ne partagent pas toutes le même ADN.
A very short, broad, but well written and fascinating, overview of the astonishing phenomenon of microchimerism: the presence of a small number of cells from one individual living within another genetically distinct person. These migrating cells most commonly occur between mother and fetus during pregnancy, where fetal cells enter the mother and maternal cells enter the fetus. The migrating cells may also persist for years, and can even become specialized, acting like native cells in tissues and organs. These "foreign" cells are currently being studied for potential links to autoimmune diseases and tissue repair. Migrating cells may also be exchanged through organ transplants, in-utero twin-to-twin transfer (or reabsorbed twin) and blood transfusion, and possibly even through sex (this is a bit surprising - humans are not fruit flies!). The discovery of this phenomenon leaves questions, and raises implications, about everything we know so far about the immune system, lineage, and identity. However, the exact roles of these migrating cells, whether beneficial or detrimental, are still largely unknown and will require more research into this emerging field of medical science. An interesting book that I really wish had been longer and included more details.
Lise Barneoud is a French science journalist; her 2025 book Hidden Guests (which I listened to in its English translation from its original French language publication) is an exploration of the current state of microchimerism. This is a topic I remember being previously discussed in some depth in Carl Zimmer's 2018 book She Has Her Mother's Laugh: The Powers, Perversions, and Potential of Heredity, though Hidden Guests provides a more up-to-date appraisal.
I think this is a good introduction to this topic for a lay audience, though I wish there was more contextualization of how this area fits into the broader study of human biology. I work in the genetics space and routinely deal with issues of chimerism (particularly, looking for the presence or absence of genetic variants from donors and recipients of transplants), and important distinction to make is the scale of chimerism in proportion to the total number of cells present and its ability or inability to be detected by current qualitative and quantitative tests. For instance, most sequencing technologies routinely used in clinical testing today can detect chimerism at a level of around 5%, with allogen testing being even more sensitive. But, these are orders of magnitudes higher than many of the research studies Barneoud cites that depend on single cell imaging. So it's difficult for us to be able to draw conclusions of the physiologic and disease impact of 0.0001% of chimeric cells in a population.
So while I find the conclusions of the book needing to be taken with a big grain of salt, this is definitely an area of research to watch going forward.
My statistics: Book 33 for 2026 Book 2339 cumulatively
Michrochimerism (a phenomenon where cells from one individual can be found in another’s body) isn’t just about cells that push the boundary of self vs nonself but emphasize that we are nothing without the collective, ie the extremely Individualistic greedy American society. We are who we surround ourselves with, we are what we eat (not in the diet fad way but in the way we nourish our gut biota). We are as healthy as our earth is healthy (gulp). It begs the question what makes you you when you have cells present in your body from other individuals like immigrants, people a with different sex assigned at birth, different race?
Book Review: Hidden Guests: Migrating Cells and How the New Science of Microchimerism Is Redefining Human Identity by Lise Barnéoud - A Public Health Practitioner’s Perspective
Lise Barnéoud’s Hidden Guests is a revelatory exploration of microchimerism that fundamentally challenges our understanding of human biology and its implications for public health. As a practitioner, I found myself oscillating between wonder at the science of cellular migration and discomfort at how this paradigm shift exposes gaps in our current medical frameworks. The book’s central premise—that we are walking ecosystems harboring genetically distinct cells from pregnancy, organ transplants, and even deceased twins—left me questioning the very definition of individual health.
Emotional Resonance: Between Awe and Existential Dread Reading about fetal cells persisting in mothers’ brains decades after pregnancy, or a transplant recipient’s bloodline becoming genetically hybrid, triggered a profound professional reckoning. Barnéoud’s vivid descriptions of these “hidden guests” made me reflect on how public health has traditionally treated bodies as closed systems—vaccinating, screening, and treating individuals without considering these cellular legacies. The chapter linking microchimerism to autoimmune diseases stirred both excitement (could this explain sex disparities in lupus?) and frustration (why isn’t this taught in medical schools?). Most haunting was the realization that these microscopic migrants may influence everything from cancer risk to psychiatric disorders—variables we’ve never adequately accounted for in population health studies.
Key Public Health Insights -The Myth of Biological Autonomy: Barnéoud dismantles the fiction of bodily independence, revealing how microchimerism blurs the lines between self and other—a paradigm shift with radical implications for maternal health, transplantation ethics, and even vaccine response. -Microchimerism as Social Determinant: The book suggests that socioeconomic factors (e.g., access to reproductive care) may shape microchimerism patterns, creating yet another invisible health disparity. -Rethinking Immunity: By framing the immune system as a “negotiation tool” between host and migrant cells (rather than purely defensive), the book challenges public health’s war metaphors (“fighting” pathogens) in favor of ecological models.
Constructive Criticism -From Bench to Policy: While Barnéoud excels at explaining the science, public health practitioners need more guidance on translating microchimerism research into interventions (e.g., should prenatal care include microchimerism monitoring?). -Global Health Equity: The book’s focus on high-income country research risks obscuring how microchimerism might interact with endemic infections or malnutrition in low-resource settings.
Final Thoughts Hidden Guests is a seismic intervention in public health thinking. It left me convinced that until we integrate microchimerism into our frameworks—whether studying intergenerational trauma or designing precision medicine—we’re practicing with blinders on. Barnéoud’s work demands we redefine health not as individual purity, but as skillful coexistence.
Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5) – A groundbreaking but occasionally esoteric masterpiece.
Gratitude: Thank you to the publisher and Edelweiss for the review copy. In a field obsessed with measurable outcomes, this book reminds us that some of health’s most powerful determinants are invisible.
I knew chimerism could be a thing in a few humans, but I did not know that micro-chimerism was a thing in all of us.
Do the human cells in our bodies that did not come from the single fertilised egg that most of our cells come from help or hinder, heal, protect or attack? Are they essential for a properly functioning immune system or the cause of autoimmune diseases? The answers are varied and nuanced and some of them are still speculative.
A short, but fascinating book with right up to date information on the state of research into this phenomenon.
J'ai tout simplement adoré. Le sujet est passionnant et il est rendu accessible par l'autrice qui nous entraîne dans une questionnement quasiment philosophie.
This is how you write a science communication book for the public: clearly, engagingly, concisely. Lise Barneoud manages to bring the reader up to speed about the most recent science in microchimerism in just over 150 pages using short clear descriptions of science, and clear and creative metaphors. Her choices turn what could have been a dry book of facts into a philosophical meditation on the self and immigration. Because what are chimeric cells if not shadow immigrants.
Some of the examples offered in this book where known to me, but most were completely new. I was familiar with chimerism caused by an absorbed twin, and that caused by fetal cells passing from the fetus to their mother. I wasn't aware how bi-directional that highway truly is, or that cells from three generations (grandmother, mother and latest offspring) can sometimes be found in the same person. Microchimerism caused by sexual intercourse that doesn't result in fertilization was something I'd heard of but had thought it was all wacky--it looks like it's a real phenomenon, but how long this lingers is yet unclear. The book goes beyond merely describing how cells from different individuals can end up in other bodies: whether through sexual intercourse, pregnancy, or transplant, the effects may be similar and equally diverse. Sometimes the migrating cells become established productive members of the cellular body, regenerating, pruning synapses and boosting immunity or triggering life-saving tolerance. Other times the cells may boost inflammation and cancer. This part brought to mind "The Master Builder: How the New Science of the Cell Is Rewriting the Story of Life" by Alfonso Martinez Arias. In his thesis, that cells rather than genes are the engines of life, Arias emphasizes how context (i.e. cellular environment and intra and inter-cellular communication) is the most important thing deciding a cell's fate.
The metaphors did occasionally jump way ahead of current knowledge, especially in the final chapters. There was a lot of speculation about how many generations can be trapped in an individuals, without any discussion on how migrant cells can break the Hayflick limit--the hard stop for future cell divisions caused by an exhaustion of telomeres that protect the ends of chromosomes. The author gives an example of migrant cells that were able to traverse bodies across 10 generations of mice, but mouse cells can immortalize themselves spontaneously in culture--something human cells have never been able to do. Some of that poetic license was a bit disorienting after multiple chapters in which science and poetry had blended seamlessly. Take for example the case of marmoset fathers who the author presumes may be providing more care to offspring who are macro-chimeric because their skin-to-skin contact 'recognizes' more of their HLA genes; this is completely absurd, given that skin cells on the upper levels are dead and don't establish any connections with other dead skin cells on another individual--they cannot given they're just empty shells. I was surprised how at times the language was also quite gender inclusive, until I found out that was an artifact of the translation and not part of the original French writing.
Despite small confusions and unnecessary speculations, I think the book did an excellent job of introducing the public to the latest science of microchimerism, and highlighted both its promises and challenges laying ahead. The most important part of this book was the reminder of how limited and artificial our biological 'rules' truly are. Micro and macro-chimeric individuals and their migrating cells do not break the laws of nature; rather they break the rules we imposed on nature in order to understand it. As usual, when we probe deeper into an area, we find more exceptions and more options that we previously thought. How we react to this uncertainty tells us more about ourselves, than about the multitudes hiding inside us. 4.5 stars rounded up
I began this book with a robust interest in microchimerism and all of its many implications for life, love, and our pursuits of everything in between as creatures of this world. "Who are we really?" is the question I ask as we learn more about the microbiota of our bodies, and the epigenetics and environments that shape our minds and bodies even before we are born from our mother's womb. Who are we really, as individuals, if we are instead a literal amalgamation of all we've seen, touched, and experienced, even from our earliest existence as "fetal cells"? The book is captivating in how it summarizes developments in science and research on the topic, and it is simple enough for the average layperson to understand. The metaphors and similes about immigration are notably a bit heavy-handed in parts, but not so bothersome that they become a distraction.
No, the one specific part that caught me off guard and made me wince, if not recoil in disgust, was near the front of the book, where the author recalls a secretive conversation with Lee Nelson. Barneoud writes of the conversation:
"'An abortion in the early stages of pregnancy might be expected to lead to a greater proportion of stem cells of fetal origin than a full-term birth. They may even have a greater potential for regeneration.'"
The author then follows up with: "If these cells persist and repair tissues, then abortion could in fact provide a rejuvenating boost." (pg. 39)
I felt the urge to put the book down at this point and adjust my own discomfort with the implications of such a conclusion. I tried to will myself to continue reading, excusing the suggestive comment that "abortion could in fact provide a rejuvenating boost" as just another example of a science writer's messy handling of the lines between scientific observation and ethics and morality, but it was too much of a bother for me to make the effort to see if the author could provide any additional insight or commentary to make up for it in the next chapter. It became a stick in my craw, one I have neither the time nor the patience to remove for such a short read. I figure I can find an equally engaging book, or even dissect the scientific literature itself, on microchimerism that isn't so ethically fraught. This book will reside on my Did Not Finish shelf.
Hidden Guests was a surprising, engaging read about how we interpret biological evidence, the philosophy of self, and the patchwork ecosystem that makes up the human body.
As someone with a science background, I thoroughly enjoyed reading all the different cases of microchimerism and having my knowledge challenged. Still, all readers, science background or not, will easily engage with this book. The writing and research was concise, it was cohesive and flowed well, and the overall ideas of self and immunity were incredibly thought-provoking.
I relish books that leave me with more questions than answers after reading them. This book presents a challenging concept, attempting to demonstrate that there isn’t a singular “me” but rather an “us” due to the various ways cells are exchanged between individuals, such as mother-child interchanges, transfusions, transplants, or even the simple exchange of sexual fluids between partners!
It’s captivating and leaves you pondering the broader implications of human interactions.
Are these exchanges entirely harmless? Do foreign cells contribute to or exacerbate conditions like cancer and heart disease? Are there other forms of exchange within the microchimerism realm?
I enjoyed this book. The science of microchimerism can be very complex but I thought that the author did a great job of maintaining a conversational tone while minimizing jargon. I also thought that the explanations were clear and well-laid out. Also great were the intriguing stories of people affected by microchimerism and the wide-ranging discussions about self versus nonself and the related ethical issues. This is a fascinating book. Thank you to Edelweiss and Greystone Books for the digital review copy.
OMG You absolutely need to check out this book! It will blow your mind. Mothers and fetuses (and twins in útero) exchange cells which can go Anywhere in mother’s body, including heart and brain, and assume function of thise cells. In addition, they are attracted to sites of inflammation to help heal.
This is a concise, elegant, and intellectually provocative exploration of microchimerism, the presence of genetically distinct cells within the human body. Blending cutting-edge science with compelling human stories, Barnéoud challenges the deeply rooted notion of a singular, autonomous biological self, showing instead that human identity is far more porous and relational than we assume.
This book completely changed the way I think about my own body. Barnéoud doesn’t overhype the science or make wild promises. Instead, she walks through the research carefully, acknowledges what we still don’t know, and shows how much of this field is still evolving. It feels responsible and grounded, which I respect a lot.
I give it a 3.75. The writing is clear, scientific basis is good, but in some places it gets a bit fanciful and oversteps the science and heads into conjecture. For the general public, the basics of microchimerism are well presented. It is very well stated that while correlations with microchimerism are evident, they do not mean causation.
Wow! This is my favorite book I’ve read this year. Absolutely fascinating — everyone and their mother should read it ASAP. I couldn’t recommend it more. I'm about to go on a deep dive into microchimerism.
I did not knowmuch about this world of microchimeras. That has now been corrected. Granted, the short book tried to make much more out of it than it was able, as there was some redundancy in the examples, but still an educational experience.
The book reveals something very exciting and relatively newly discovered, which may affect / influence conception, miscarriages, inherited diseases and disease resistance, and more (because it is so new). Very lucidly explained for the average reader.
loved this! very very interesting / potentially world changing perspective for medicine. i also liked the context on the sociological implications like how the language we use to discuss foreign cells mirrors discourse on immigration and how this calls dna results for convictions into question
Disruptive, cambia tutte le concezioni di identità e barriera che si essa immunitaria che ematoncefalica che psicologico/sociale. Un modo decisamente rivoluzionario di iniziare il 2026.
“We want to believe it, though, don’t we?…Wouldn’t microchimerism be a just reward for the heavy price women pay for the reproduction of the species? A way of evening the score somewhat with men, who pass on their genes to the next generation with considerably less effort, through the course of their orgasmic relations? Though we women take on the bulk of the risks for the survival of our offspring, we would be somewhat compensated by collecting cells potentially beneficial to our health.”
J'ai fais mon grand oral sur l'un des thèmes ces sujets sont vraiment interressant et pertinents. (Jai eu 20 slayyyy )Hâte de voir comment ces recherches seront utilisés à l'avenir même si entre de mauvaises mains cela peut faire peur ...
Enquête journalistique prenante et intrigante sur ces cellules qui passent d’un corps à un autre et s’y installent confortablement. Bien référencé pour ceux/celles qui voudraient plus de détails 😉