Submitted by Kevin4938 t3_117r991 in askscience
A while ago, my daughter received a transplant as part of leukemia treatment. She's recovered well, but the chemo wiped out her immune system, and she's had to redo all of her childhood vaccines. If immunity is tied to the stem cells, why did she not inherit the donor's immunity?
EDIT: Thank you everyone for the responses. They make a lot of sense, and it came to mind with the last of the replacement vaccines happening tomorrow.
screen317 t1_j9e0puw wrote
Immune memory is not stored in bone marrow stem and progenitor cells. These are the only cells that expand to reconstitute the recipient's immune system.
You don't transplant memory cells that live in secondary lymphoid organs like the spleen and lymph nodes.