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Steroids and hematopoiesis II. The effect of steroids on in vitro erythroid colony growth: Evidence for different target cells for different classes of steroids

✍ Scribed by Jack W. Singer; Dr. John W. Adamson


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1976
Tongue
English
Weight
543 KB
Volume
88
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Androgenic steroids and their non‐androgenic 5p‐H metabolites enhance the number of colonies of hemoglobin synthesizing cells grown from rat bone marrow in response to a standard (0.25 unitlml) concentration of erythropoietin. The target cells for two steroids were found to be different. Cells influenced by the androgen, fluoxymesterone (fluoxy), resembled cells responding to erythropoietin in their cycle characteristics, as measured by tritiated thymidine suicide, and in their physical characteristics, as determined by velocity sedimentation gradient separation. Cells responding to etiocholanolone (etio) had a much lower tritiated thymidine suicide rate and different sedimentation velocities. Reincubation of marrow cells with etio for two hours was sufficient to enhance erythroid colony growth by 84%, whereas a similar incubation with fluoxy produced no increment. These studies demonstrate that different classes of steroids may influence in vitro erythropoiesis by acting on distinct populations of marrow cells. Fluoxymesterone appears to act through cells already committed to respond to erythropoietin, while etiocholanolone appears to act on a separate, perhaps more primitive population of marrow cells.


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Steroids and hematopoiesis I. The effect
✍ Jack W. Singer; Alan I. Samuels; Dr. John W. Adamson 📂 Article 📅 1976 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 501 KB

## Abstract When substituted steroids of several classes are added to cultures of rat bone marrow cells in the presence of erythropoietin a consistent enhancement of the number of colonies of hemoglobin synthesizing cells is obtained. Maximum steroid effectiveness was found to be between 10^−6^ and