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Peritoneal exudate cells. I. Growth requirement of cells capable of forming colonies in soft agar

✍ Scribed by Hsiu-San Lin; Carleton C. Stewart


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1974
Tongue
English
Weight
792 KB
Volume
83
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Mouse peritoneal exudate cells induced by thioglycollate medium can form colonies in soft agar with a plating efficiency of about 5% (0.6%–10%). Cells from an unstimulated peritoneal cavity form no colonies or have a plating efficiency of less than 0.001 %. These colony‐forming cells from the peritoneal exudate are similar to bone marrow colony‐forming cells in vitro in that they both require a substance(s) present in conditioned medium from L‐cells or mouse embryo fibroblasts or the serum from endotoxin‐treated mice for the initiation and the continuation of their growth. However, peritoneal exudate colony‐forming cells have a much longer initial lag period (10–14 days) and can survive longer in the absence of L‐cell conditioned medium than bone marrow colony‐forming cells. Only mononuclear cells, presumably macrophages, are observed in peritoneal exudate colonies, whereas bone marrow cell colonies contain both polymorphonuclear cells and macrophages.


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Peritoneal exudate cells. V. Influence o
✍ Hsiu-San Lin; Charles Kuhn; Carleton C. Stewart 📂 Article 📅 1978 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 460 KB

## Abstract We investigated the effects of age, sex and strain in the induction of peritoneal exudate colony‐forming cells (PE‐CFC) in mice. Sex and age (ranging from 3 weeks to 12 months) had no significant effect on the induction of PE‐CFC. However, we found significant difference between strains