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1.
The influences of human tumor necrosis factor (TNF) (LuKII), recombinant human TNF-alpha, natural human interferon-gamma (HuIFN-gamma), recombinant HuIFN-gamma, and natural HuIFN-alpha were evaluated alone or in combination for their effects in vitro on colony formation by human bone marrow granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM), erythroid (BFU-E), and multipotential (CFU-GEMM) progenitor cells incubated at 5% CO2 in lowered (5%) O2 tension. TNF (LuKII) and recombinant TNF-alpha caused a similar dose-dependent inhibition of colony formation from CFU-GM, BFU-E, and CFU-GEMM. Day 7 CFU-GM colonies were more sensitive than both day 14 CFU-GM colonies and day 7 CFU-GM clusters to inhibition by TNF. BFU-E colonies and CFU-GEMM colonies were least sensitive to inhibition with TNF. The suppressive effects of TNF (LuKII) and recombinant TNF-alpha were inactivated respectively with hetero-anti-human TNF (LuKII) and monoclonal anti-recombinant human TNF-alpha. The hetero-anti-TNF (LuKII) did not inactivate the suppressive effects of TNF-alpha and the monoclonal anti-recombinant TNF-alpha did not inactivate TNF (LuKII). The suppressive effects of TNF did not appear to be mediated via endogenous T lymphocytes and/or monocytes in the bone marrow preparation, and a pulse exposure of marrow cells with TNF for 60 min resulted in maximal or near maximal inhibition when compared with cells left with TNF for the full culture incubation period. A degree of species specificity was noted in that human TNF were more active against human marrow CFU-GM colonies than against mouse marrow CFU-GM colonies. Samples of bone marrow from patients with non-remission myeloid leukemia were set up in the CFU-GM assay and formed the characteristic abnormal growth pattern of large numbers of small sized clusters. These cluster-forming cells were more sensitive to inhibition by TNF than were the CFU-GM colonies and clusters grown from the bone marrow of normal donors. The sensitivity to TNF of colony formation by CFU-GM of patients with acute myelogenous leukemia in partial or complete remission was comparable with that of normal donors. When combinations of TNF and HuIFN were evaluated together, it was noted that TNF (LuKII) or recombinant TNF synergized with natural or recombinant HuIFN-gamma, but not with HuIFN-alpha, to suppress colony formation of CFU-GM, BFU-E, and CFU-GEMM from bone marrow of normal donors at concentrations that had no suppressive effects when molecules were used alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
We have recently demonstrated that transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2 are potent inhibitors of the growth and differentiation of murine and human hematopoietic cells. The proliferation of primary unfractionated murine bone marrow by interleukin-3 (IL-3) and human bone marrow by IL-3 or granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) was inhibited by TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2, while the proliferation of murine bone marrow by GM-CSF or murine and human marrow with G-CSF was not inhibited. Mouse and human hematopoietic colony formation was differentially affected by TGF-beta 1. In particular, CFU-GM, CFU-GEMM, BFU-E, and HPP-CFC, the most immature colonies, were inhibited by TGF-beta 1, whereas the more differentiated unipotent CFU-G, CFU-M, and CFU-E were not affected. TGF-beta 1 inhibited IL-3-induced growth of murine leukemic cell lines within 24 h, after which the cells were still viable. Subsequent removal of the TGF-beta 1 results in the resumption of normal growth. TGF-beta 1 inhibited the growth of factor-dependent NFS-60 cells in a dose-dependent manner in response to IL-3, GM-CSF, G-CSF, CSF-1, IL-4, or IL-6. TGF-beta 1 inhibited the growth of a variety of murine and human myeloid leukemias, while erythroid and macrophage leukemias were insensitive. Lymphoid leukemias, whose normal cellular counterparts were markedly inhibited by TGF-beta, were also resistant to TGF-beta 1 inhibition. These leukemic cells have no detectable TGF-beta 1 receptors on their cell surface. Last, TGF-beta 1 directly inhibited the growth of isolated Thy-1-positive progenitor cells. Thus, TGF-beta may be an important modulator of normal and leukemic hematopoietic cell growth.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of recombinant murine macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1 beta and MIP-2 on the suppressive activity of MIP-1 alpha were tested using colony formation by human and murine bone marrow burst-forming unit-erythroid (BFU-E), colony-forming unit-granulocyte erythroid macrophage, megakaryocyte (CFU-GEMM), and colony-forming unit-granulocyte macrophage (CFU-GM) progenitor cells. MIP-1 beta, but not MIP-2, when added with MIP-1 alpha to cells, blocked the suppressive effects of MIP-1 alpha on both human and murine BFU-E, CFU-GEMM, and CFU-GM colony formation. Similar results were observed regardless of the early acting cytokines used: human rGM-CSF plus human rIL-3, and two recently described potent cytokines, a genetically engineered human rGM-CSF/IL-3 fusion protein and MGF, a c-kit ligand. The more potent the stimuli, the greater the suppressive activity noted. Pulse treatment of hu bone marrow cells with MIP-1 alpha at 4 degrees C for 1 h was as effective in inhibiting colony formation as continuous exposure of cells to MIP-1 alpha, and the pulsing effect with MIP-1 alpha could not be overcome by subsequent exposure of cells to MIP-1 beta. Also, pulse exposure of cells to MIP-1 beta blocked the activity of subsequently added MIP-1 alpha. For specificity, the action of a nonrelated myelosuppressive factor H-ferritin, was compared. MIP-1 alpha and H-ferritin were shown to act on similar target populations of early BFU-E, CFU-GEMM, and CFU-GM. MIP-1 beta did not block the suppressive activity of H-ferritin. Also, hemin and an inactive recombinant human H-ferritin mutein counteracted the suppressive effects of the wildtype H-ferritin molecule, but did not block the suppressive effects of MIP-1 alpha. These results show that MIP-1 beta's ability to block the action of MIP-1 alpha is specific. In addition, the results suggest that MIP-1 alpha and MIP-beta can, through rapid action, modulate early myeloid progenitor cell proliferation.  相似文献   

4.
The influences of human interferons--natural gamma (2 X 10(7) NIH reference U/mg), recombinant gamma (approximately 5 X 10(6) U/mg), natural alpha (1.4 X 10(8) international reference U/mg), and natural beta (10(6) international reference U/mg)--were evaluated alone or in combination for their effects in vitro on colony formation by low density human bone marrow granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM), erythroid (BFU-E), and multipotential (CFU-GEMM) progenitor cells incubated at 5% CO2 in normal incubator (approximately 20%) O2 tension or low (5%) O2 tension. Alone, these interferons demonstrated the same dose response inhibitory curves, as we reported previously, when cells were grown at 20% O2. Recombinant IFN-gamma gave the same dose response curve as natural IFN-gamma. Natural or recombinant interferon synergized with IFN-alpha to suppress colony formation at concentrations that were approximately 2 log units lower than that required by either interferon alone. Equal concentrations of these interferons were not needed for the synergistic effect and were still apparent when one was present at concentrations of 2 log units less than the other. IFN-gamma synergized to a lesser extent with IFN-beta, but IFN-alpha did not synergize with IFN-beta. Cells grown at 5% O2 were more sensitive to inhibition by 2 log units less IFN-gamma or IFN-alpha, and this effect was additive with the synergistic effects of IFN-gamma and IFN-alpha together. These results may have physiological, pathological, and/or clinical relevance.  相似文献   

5.
Monoclonal antibodies, My10 (HPCA-1) and major histocompatibility class II (HLA-DR), were used to enrich and phenotype normal human marrow colony-forming unit: granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM), burst-forming unit: erythroid (BFU-E), and multipotential colony-forming unit: granulocyte-erythroid-macrophage-megakaryocyte (CFU-GEMM) progenitor cells. Nonadherent low density T lymphocyte-depleted marrow cells were sorted on a Coulter Epics 753 dye laser flow cytometry system with the use of Texas Red-labeled anti-My10 and phycoerythrin conjugated anti-HLA-DR. Cells were separated into populations with nondetectable expression of antigens (DR-My10-) or with constant expression of one antigen and increasing densities of the other antigen. More than 98% of the CFU-GM, BFU-E, and CFU-GEMM were found in fractions containing cells expressing both HLA-DR and My10 antigens. The cloning efficiency (CE) of cells in the DR-My10- cell fraction was 0.01%. In the antigen-positive sorted fractions, the CE was highest (up to 47%) in the fractions of cells expressing high My10 and low DR (My10 DR+) antigens and was lowest (2.5%) in the fraction of cells expressing low My10 and low DR (My10+DR+) antigens. Populations of cells varying in the density of HLA-DR, but not My10, antigens varied in the proportion and types of progenitor cells present. When My10-positive cells were sorted for HLA-DR density expression, the CE for CFU-GM was similar in the DR+ and DR++ fractions, but most of the BFU-E and CFU-GEMM were found in the DR+ fraction. Within the CFU-GM compartment, most of the eosinophil progenitors were found in the DR+ fraction, whereas a greater proportion of macrophage progenitors were detected in the DR++ fraction. CFU-GM and BFU-E in the fractions of cells positive for DR and My10 were assessed for responsiveness to the effects of recombinant human tumor necrosis factor-alpha, recombinant human interferon-gamma, and prostaglandin E1. Colony formation from CFU-GM was suppressed by the three molecules, and colony formation by BFU-E was suppressed by recombinant human tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma and enhanced, in the presence of T lymphocyte-conditioned medium, by prostaglandin E1 in all antigen-positive fractions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF beta) regulates cell growth and differentiation in numerous cell systems, including several hematopoietic lineages. We used in vitro cultures of highly enriched hematopoietic progenitor cells stimulated by natural and recombinant growth factors to investigate the biologic effects of TGF beta 1 and TGF beta 2 on erythroid (CFU-E and burst-forming unit (BFU)-E), granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) and multilineage (i.e., granulocyte, erythroid, macrophage, and megakaryocyte; CFU-GEMM) colony-forming cells. In the absence of exogenous CSF, neither TGF beta 1 nor TGF beta 2 supported progenitor cell growth. In the presence of recombinant or natural CSF, picomolar concentrations of TGF beta 1 inhibited growth of CFU-E, BFU-E, and CFU-GEMM and enhanced growth of day 7 CFU-GM. Inhibition of CFU-E and BFU-E by human and porcine TGF beta 1 was similar, ranging from 17 to 73% over a concentration range of 0.05 to 1.0 ng/ml, and was largely independent of the type of burst-promoting activity used (rIL-3 vs cell line 5637-conditioned medium). Inhibition of CFU-GEMM ranged from 79 to 98% over a concentration range of 0.25 to 1.0 ng/ml. The inhibitory effect of TGF beta 1 was progressively lost when its addition was delayed for 40 to 120 h, suggesting a mode of action during early cell divisions. In contrast, growth of CFU-GM stimulated by plateau concentrations of human rG-CSF, rGM-CSF, and rIL-3 was enhanced up to 154 +/- 22% by human TGF beta 1. Porcine platelet-derived TGF beta 2 was essentially without effect on the progenitor populations examined. These results support the hypothesis that TGF beta may play role in the regulation of hematopoietic progenitor cell proliferation by differentially affecting individual lineages and is apparently capable of doing so in the relative absence of marrow accessory cells.  相似文献   

7.
The actions of purified iron-saturated human lactoferrin (LF), purified preparations of human MiaPaCa colony stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1), and recombinant murine interleukin-3 (IL-3) were evaluated in vivo in mice. Studies in vitro were compared at lowered (5%), as well as at normal incubator (20%), oxygen (O2) tension because of the potentially greater physiologic relevance of in vitro studies performed at lowered O2 tension. The results demonstrate that 1) increased release of granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in vitro from pokeweed mitogen stimulated mouse spleen cells and from human mononuclear blood cells occurred at lowered O2 tension, and that human mononuclear blood leukocytes were more sensitive to the LF-induced suppression of GM-CSF release when cells were cultured at 5%, compared to 20%, O2 tension; 2) LF administered intravenously (IV) to mice pretreated with sublethal intraperitoneal dosages of Cytoxan decreased the cycling status of marrow and spleen granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM), erythroid (BFU-E-2 and BFU-E-1) and multipotential (CFU-GEMM) progenitor cells and the absolute numbers of these progenitors; these effects were most noticeable if care was taken to deplete endotoxin from the LF samples prior to testing LF in vivo and if the control medium was endotoxin free; 3) endotoxin-depleted LF decreased the cycling status of marrow and spleen CFU-GM, BFU-E, and CFU-GEMM and the numbers of these progenitors in the marrows of mice previously untreated with Cytoxan; these effects were most apparent when assessment of progenitor cells and their cycling rates were evaluated in vitro at lowered (5%) O2 tension; 4) purified natural human CSF-1 increased the absolute numbers of marrow CFU-GM and the cycling status of marrow CFU-GM and CFU-GEMM in mice pretreated with LF; and 5) purified recombinant murine IL-3 stimulated proliferation of day 8 and day 12 CFU-S (colony forming unit-spleen) in mice not previously treated with Cytoxan. These results substantiate the in vivo myelosuppressive effects of LF on CFU-GM and extend these effects to erythroid and multipotential progenitor cells, provide evidence that human CSF-1 has an in vivo action in mice, and confirm the studies of others showing that IL-3 stimulates the proliferation of CFU-S in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
The influences of TNF alpha and TNF beta were evaluated for their stimulatory and inhibitory effects on in vitro colony formation by human bone marrow granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM), erythroid (BFU-E), and multipotential (CFU-GEMM) progenitor cells. Both TNF alpha and TNF beta induced fibroblasts to produce stimulators of CFU-GM, BFU-E, and CFU-GEMM in a dose-dependent fashion. Similar results were seen when equivalent concentrations of TNF alpha and TNF beta were used. Prior incubation of the TNF alpha and TNF beta with their respective antibodies inactivated the ability of the TNF preparations to induce the release of granulocyte-macrophage, erythroid, and multipotential colony-stimulating activity from fibroblasts. In addition, incubation of the TNF-induced fibroblast supernatant with antibody before colony assay resulted in enhanced colony formation, suggesting that the TNF carried over into the colony assay suppressed colony formation. Additional proof of this suppression by TNF was evident when TNF was added directly to the CFU-GM, BFU-E, and CFU-GEMM colony assays. IL-1 does not appear to function as an intermediary in growth factor production by fibroblasts stimulated with TNF because antibody to IL-1 displayed no effect. Furthermore, assay of TNF-induced fibroblast supernatant was negative for IL-1. These results suggest that TNF alpha and TNF beta exert both a positive and negative influence on in vitro hemopoietic colony formation.  相似文献   

9.
Purified recombinant human B cell growth factor-1/IL-4 was evaluated, alone and in combination, with purified preparations of recombinant human (rhu) CSF or erythropoietin (Epo) for effects on colony formation by human bone marrow CFU-GM progenitor cells (GM) and burst forming unit-E progenitor cells. rhu IL-4 synergized with rhu G-CSF to enhance granulocyte colony formation, but had no effect on CFU-GM colony formation stimulated by rhu GM-CSF, rhu IL-3, or rhu CSF-1. Rhu IL-4 synergized with Epo to enhance BFU-E colony formation equal to that of Epo plus either rhu IL-3, rhu GM-CSF, or rhu G-CSF. Removal of adherent cells and T lymphocytes did not influence the synergistic activities of rhu IL-4. Rmu IL-4, synergized with rhu G-CSF, but not with rmu GM-CSF, rmu IL-3, or natural mu CSF-1, to enhance CFU-GM (mainly granulocyte) colony numbers by a greater than 90% pure preparation of murine CFU-GM. Also, rhu IL-4 at low concentrations enhanced release of CSF and at higher concentrations the release also of suppressor molecules from human monocytes and PHA-stimulated human T lymphocytes. Use of specific CSF antibodies suggested that rhu IL-4 was enhancing the release of G-CSF and CSF-1 from monocytes and the release of GM-CSF and possibly G-CSF from PHA-stimulated T lymphocytes. Use of antibodies for TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, or TNF-beta as well as measurement of TNF and IFN titers suggested that the suppressor molecule(s) released from monocytes were acting with TNF-alpha and those released from PHA-stimulated T lymphocytes were acting with IFN-gamma. These results implicate B cell growth factor-1/IL-4 as a synergistic activity for hematopoietic progenitors and suggest that the actions can be on both progenitor and accessory cells.  相似文献   

10.
Smad3基因剔除对小鼠造血功能的影响   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
研究Smad3基因剔除对小鼠造血功能的影响。实验小鼠分为 5组 ,每组有Smad3基因剔除小鼠(Smad3 - - )和其同窝孪生的野生型小鼠 (Smad3 + + )各 1只。小鼠的造血功能用 14天形成的脾结节 (CFU S1 4 )、多系祖细胞 (CFU GEMM)、粒 单系祖细胞 (CFU GM)、红系祖细胞 (BFU E)测定及外周血象、骨髓象等实验血液学指标来确定。每组小鼠取尾血作白细胞、红细胞和血小板计数 ,涂片作白细胞分类计数。将一侧股骨的骨髓冲出 ,制成单细胞悬液 ,计数其中有核细胞数 ,测定CFU GM、BFU E、CFU GEMM值。将每只小鼠的 4× 10 4个骨髓有核细胞 ,经尾静脉注入 3只 8~ 10周经致死量射线照射的同系雌性小鼠体内 ,测定 14天的CFU S。取一部分胸骨、肝脏、脾脏固定做病理切片 ,其余胸骨冲出骨髓 ,涂片作分类计数。结果Smad3 - - 小鼠外周血白细胞和血小板计数明显高于Smad3 + + 小鼠 ,红细胞数无显著差异。外周血白细胞分类结果也表明粒细胞显著增高。骨髓有核细胞数无显著差异 ,CFU GM显著增高 ,BFU E无显著差异 ,CFU GEMM明显减少 ,CFU S显著减少。病理形态学观察发现骨髓增生极度活跃 ,以粒系为主 ,肝脾无显著差别。骨髓涂片分类表明粒系增多 ,粒系 :红系比例增高。因此得出结论Smad3基因剔除使小鼠造血干祖细胞数目  相似文献   

11.
Purified recombinant human (rhu) IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta were evaluated for their effects on the proliferation and survival of granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) and erythroid (BFU-E) progenitor cells from normal human bone marrow (BM). Using nonadherent low density T lymphocyte depleted (NALT-) BM cells cultured in the presence or absence of IL-1, CSF-deprivation studies demonstrated that IL-1 alpha or IL-1 beta by itself did not enhance the proliferation of CFU-GM or BFU-E. They did, however, promote the survival of progenitors responding to the delayed addition of media conditioned by the 5637 cell line (5637 conditioned medium), rhu GM-CSF and erythropoietin. The survival promoting effects of IL-1 alpha on CFU-GM and BFU-E were neutralized by anti-IL-1 alpha mAb added to the cultures. The survival promoting effect of IL-1 alpha did not appear to be mediated by CSF, because neither CSF nor erythroid burst promoting activity were detectable in cultures in which NALT- cells were incubated with rhuIL-1 alpha. In addition, suboptimal concentrations of rhu macrophage CSF (CSF-1), G-CSF, GM-CSF, and IL-3, which were just below the levels that would stimulate colony formation, did not enhance progenitor cell survival. Survival of CFU-GM and BFU-E in low density (LD) bone marrow cells did not decrease as drastically as that in NALT- BM cells, and exogenously added IL-1 did not enhance progenitor cell survival of CFU-GM and BFU-E in LD BM cells. However, addition of anti-IL-1 beta decreased survival of CFU-GM and BFU-E in LD BM cells. These results implicate IL-1 in the prolonged survival of human CFU-GM and BFU-E.  相似文献   

12.
Two preparations of human interferon (IFN)-alpha were assessed for their influence on granulocyte-macrophage progenitor cells (CFU-GM) in vitro. Both highly purified human IFN-alpha Ly and recombinant IFN-alpha 2a suppressed CFU-GM colony formation in a dose-dependent manner using low-density bone-marrow target cells. Suppression of CFU-GM colony formation was accompanied by an increase in clusters. However, depletion of monocytes, T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes from low-density bone-marrow cells resulted in insensitivity of progenitor cells to IFN-alpha. These results demonstrate that the effects of human IFN-alpha on myeloid progenitor cells (CFU-GM) are mediated by accessory cells within the bone marrow.  相似文献   

13.
The development of culture conditions for growing normal human thymic epithelial (TE) cells free from contamination with other stromal cells has allowed us to identify and characterize TE cell-derived cytokines. In this study, we report that cultured human TE cells produced CSF that supported the growth of clonal hematopoietic progenitor cells in the light density fraction of human bone marrow cells. Thymic epithelial supernatants (TES) induced growth of granulocyte/macrophage colonies (CFU-GM), mixed granulocyte/erythrocyte/monocyte/megakaryocyte colonies (CFU-GEMM), and early burst-forming unit erythroid colonies (BFU-E). In addition, TES induced differentiation of the promyelocyte leukemic cell line HL-60 and stimulated growth of both granulocyte (CFU-G) and monocyte (CFU-M) colonies from murine bone marrow cells. Using anion exchange column chromatography, pluripotent CSF activities in TES were separated and shown to be distinct from an IL-1-like cytokine that has been shown as a TE cell-derived cytokine (TE-IL-1). Colony-stimulating activity supporting the growth of bone marrow CFU-GEMM, BFU-E, and CFU-GM co-eluted at 150 to 180 mM NaCl. A separate peak of CFU-GM-stimulating activity eluted early in the gradient at 20 mM NaCl. In Northern blot analysis of enriched RNA, synthetic oligonucleotide probes complementary to human G-CSF and M-CSF coding sequence each hybridized with a single RNA species of 1.7 and 4.4 kb, respectively. These data suggest that normal human TE cells synthesize G-CSF and M-CSF that promote differentiation of non-lymphoid hematopoietic cell precursors.  相似文献   

14.
15.
3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (Azidothymidine or AZT) has attained wide critical utility in the treatment of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Unfortunately, treatment with AZT is associated with the development of severe hematopoietic toxicity. The AZT sensitivity of marrow progenitors was different with an IC 50 of 10(-8) M and 10(-6) M for respectively BFU-E and CFU-GM/GEMM. Data reported here show that recombinant human interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha), a pleiotropic cytokine, was demonstrated to be efficient to protect normal human as well as murine hematopoietic progenitors (CFU-GM, CFU-GEMM and BFU-E) from the toxic effect of AZT. The maximal effect was observed with 30 U/ml (Human cells) or 100 U/ml (murine cells) IL-1 alpha for BFU-E and CFU-GM/GEMM, with a marked effect at 1 U/ml. The results demonstrate that marrow progenitors respond differently to AZT and point out the potential efficacy of IL-1 alpha to enhance the proliferation of hematopoietic stem cells treated with growth factors (IL-3, erythropoietin) and to minimize the hematopoietic toxicity associated with AZT treatment.  相似文献   

16.
17.
3'-Azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT) has attained wide clinical utility in the treatment of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Unfortunately, associated with AZT use, is the development of severe hematopoietic toxicity as manifested by anemia, neutropenia and overall bone marrow suppression. Interleukin-1 (IL-1), a cytokine, primarily produced by activated macrophages, has been involved in the control of hematopoiesis by acting synergistically with other hematopoietic growth factors, and has been demonstrated to be an effective agent in reducing the myelosuppression associated with the therapy for malignant disease. We report here the ability of recombinant human IL-1 alpha to protect normal murine hematopoietic progenitors (CFU-GM, BFU-E, and CFU-Meg) from the toxic effects of AZT. Following the determination of the LD50 dose for each progenitor, IL-1 was added in co-culture studies (10-1000 units; 0.001-1.0 micrograms/ml protein) with adherent cell depleted marrow. Marrow progenitors expressed differences in AZT sensitivity, e.g., BFU-E, LD50 5 x 10(-9)M; CFU-Meg, LD50 10(-7) M; CFU-GM, 5 x 10(-5) M respectively. IL-1 inhibited AZT induced toxicity. The maximum IL-1 dose effect was observed for CFU-GM and CFU-Meg at 300 units, 0.3 micrograms protein; however BFU-E required a dose of 600 units, 0.6 micrograms/ml protein to reverse the effects of AZT. These results demonstrate marrow progenitors respond differently to AZT and identifies the potential efficacy of IL-1 to minimize the hematopoietic toxicity associated with AZT treatment.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Progenitor cell therapies show great promise, but their potential for clinical applications requires improved storage and transportation. Desiccated cells stored at ambient temperature would provide economic and practical advantages over approaches employing cell freezing and subzero temperature storage. The objectives of this study were to assess a method for loading the stabilizing sugar, trehalose, into hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HPC) and to evaluate the effects of subsequent freeze-drying and storage at ambient temperature on differentiation and clonogenic potential. HPC were isolated from human umbilical cord blood and loaded with trehalose using an endogenous cell surface receptor, termed P2Z. Solution containing trehalose-loaded HPC was placed into vials, which were transferred to a tray freeze-dryer and removed during each step of the freeze-drying process to assess differentiation and clonogenic potential. Control groups for these experiments were freshly isolated HPC. Control cells formed 1450±230 CFU-GM, 430±140 BFU-E, and 50±40 CFU-GEMM per 50 µL. Compared to the values for the control cells, there was no statistical difference observed for cells removed at the end of the freezing step or at the end of primary drying. There was a gradual decrease in the number of CFU-GM and BFU-E for cells removed at different temperatures during secondary drying; however, there were no significant differences in the number of CFU-GEMM. To determine storage stability of lyophilized HPC, cells were stored for 4 weeks at 25°C in the dark. Cells reconstituted immediately after lyophilization produced 580±90 CFU-GM (∼40%, relative to unprocessed controls p<0.0001), 170±70 BFU-E (∼40%, p<0.0001), and 41±22 CFU-GEMM (∼82%, p = 0.4171), and cells reconstituted after 28 days at room temperature produced 513±170 CFU-GM (∼35%, relative to unprocessed controls, p<0.0001), 112±68 BFU-E (∼26%, p<0.0001), and 36±17 CFU-GEMM (∼82%, p = 0.2164) These studies are the first to document high level retention of CFU-GEMM following lyophilization and storage for 4 weeks at 25°C. This type of flexible storage stability would potentially permit the ability to ship and store HPC without the need for refrigeration.  相似文献   

20.
Recombinant human interleukin-3 (rhuIL-3) was assessed for its effects on the growth of normal human hematopoietic bone marrow nucleated cells, and on granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) and erythroid (BFU-E) progenitor cells in a liquid culture system which allows for the prolonged growth of these cells in vitro. RhuIL-3, at concentrations of 100 and 500 units/mL, significantly enhanced the numbers of nucleated cells, as well as the numbers of supernatant and adherent CFU-GM and BFU-E growing in tissue culture flasks or dishes over a period of 4 to 6 weeks. The results demonstrated the rhuIL-3 has a stimulating effect on the growth of human marrow cells in prolonged culture. This information is consistent with the effects of rhuIL-3 in short-term marrow colony assays in vitro and with the in vivo actions of recombinant murine IL-3 in mice, and may be of relevance to clinical trials that will be assessing the hematopoietic effects of rhuIL-3 in humans.  相似文献   

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