Several investigators have described hemopoietic colonies expressing multilineage differentiation in culture. We recently identified a class of murine hemopoietic progenitors which form blast cell colonies with very high replating efficiencies. In ordeT to clarify further t h e relationship between
A kinetic study of the genetic control of hemopoietic progenitor cells assayed in culture and In vivo
โ Scribed by D. J. A. Sutherland; J. E. Till; E. A. McCulloch
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1970
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 640 KB
- Volume
- 75
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
The kinetics of growth of bone marrow cells from normal or genetically anemic mice (Sl/Sl^d^ and W/W^v^) were studied in irradiated normal and genetically anemic hosts. The parameters followed included total cellularity, the number of peroxidase positive cells, and the number of cells capable of forming colonies in vivo (CFUโS) or in culture (CFUโC). The results of these experiments demonstrate that W and Sl defects alter the growth of CFUโC and peroxidaseโpositive cells to a modest degree; that the defects are more obvious when studied in spleen rather than in bone marrow; and that there is no additivity of W and Sl defects.
Nineteen irradiated recipients of marrow from W/W^v^ mice were studied after three to six months. Of these, 18 showed hostโtype erythrocytes, while in one mouse the erythrocytes had the size distribution of W/W^v^ cells. This finding indicated that occasionally genetically defective stem cells may repopulate irradiated hosts.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract We recently identified a murine hemopoietic stem cell colony which consists of undifferentiated (blast) cells and appears to be more primitive than CFUโGEMM in the stem cell hierarchy. The progenitors for the colony which we termed โstem cell colonyโ possess an extensive selfโrenewal ca
A detailed study of cell growth and antibody production kinetics in continuous culture found that the specific rate of antibody production reached a maximum saturated profile at a specific growth rate less than the maximum. This observation is novel and of importance in the understanding of the mech