## Abstract Equilibrium density centrifugation was used to characterise and separate subpopulations of mouse haemopoietic progenitor cells capable of producing colonies of granulocytes and macrophages in vitro. The material used to induce colony formation (CSF) was prepared from an extract of pregn
In vitro maintenance of differentiation marker synthesis by subpopulations of mouse thymocytes
✍ Scribed by Rothenberg, Ellen ;Triglia, Dennis
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 729 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0091-7419
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Mouse thymocyte populations enriched in functionally incompetent, “immature” cells on the one hand, or in competent “mature” cells on the other hand, express different steady‐state levels of certain surface antigens and marker enzymes. In the cases of the glycoproteins H‐2 (K and D), Qa, and TL, and the DNA polymerase terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT), these levels reflect different rates of de novo synthesis in the two populations. Thus each population appears to manifest a characteristic pattern of synthetic rates for the various products relative to total protein synthesis. To investigate the maintenance of these patterns, enriched pools of “immature” and “mature” thymocytes were incubated in vitro for 24 h, and the rates of product synthesis before and after culture were compared. H‐2 synthesis, initially most rapid in the mature cells, continued to be made at the highest rate in this population. TdT synthesis, a characteristic activity of the immature cells, was not induced in the mature cells, but proceeded at an increased relative rate in the immature population. Therefore, the differences between the rates of H‐2 and TdT synthesis were stable properties of the two thymocyte populations. Another marker of immature cells, TL, did not continue to be produced in parallel with TdT. Rather, its synthesis was selectively curtailed in relation to the continuing protein synthesis in the immature cultures. This non‐coordinate regulation of TL and TdT production in immature thymocytes may be due to several mechanisms. These are discussed with regard to their implications for pathways of thymocyte maturation.
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