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1.
A culture system that identifies the precursor of murine bone marrow fibroblastic stromal cells (stroma-initiating cells, SIC) has been developed. In this system, mature fibroblasts are depleted by adherence to plastic dishes and the nonadherent cells are seeded at a low density, which results in the formation of colonies composed of fibroblastic cells. Macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) has been shown to accelerate the colony formation in the system. In this study, we examined the stroma-inducing activity of a number of cytokines. Neither granulocyte-CSF, stem cell factor, interleukin (IL)-1, IL-6, transforming growth factor, epidermal growth factor, insulin-like growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, nor fibroblast growth factor showed the activity. Similarly, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) did not show any stroma-inducing activity, but the factor inhibited the stromal colony formation induced by M-CSF. In this study, we found that granulocyte/macrophage-CSF (GM-CSF) and IL-3, as well as M-CSF had the stroma-inducing activity. Neither an additive nor synergistic effect was observed when the three factors were assayed in various combinations. The stroma-inducing activity of M-CSF, GM-CSF and IL-3 was observed even if lineage-negative bone marrow cells were used as target cells, suggesting that mature hematopoietic cells such as macrophages and granulocytes were not involved in the induction of stromal colony formation by these factors. Our results raise the possibility that GM-CSF and IL-3 as well as M-CSF stimulate the proliferation or differentiation of the precursor of bone marrow fibroblastic stromal cells.  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.
IL-1 inhibits B cell differentiation in long term bone marrow cultures   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
There is evidence that stromal cells are responsive to changes in their external milieu and that this can affect their function. IL-1 has been identified as one mediator that can affect stromal cells by increasing their secretion of CSF. The monokine has also been reported to be a B cell differentiation factor. The purpose of this study was to test the effects of IL-1 on the pattern of hemopoietic cell differentiation by adding IL-1 alpha to myeloid long term bone marrow cultures (MBMC) at the time of their transfer to lymphoid bone marrow culture conditions. This usually results in the cessation of myelopoiesis and the induction of B lymphopoiesis. The addition of 50 U/ml of rIL-1 alpha, but not 10 U/ml, to MBMC at the time of their transfer to lymphoid conditions resulted in a complete inhibition of B cell differentiation and sustained myelopoiesis. To determine whether adherent layer cells contributed to this effect, conditioned medium (CM) was collected from adherent layers treated previously with the antibiotic mycophenolic acid. This depletes the hemopoietic cells from the cultures and retains a purified population of stromal cells. CM from mycophenolic acid- treated adherent layers exposed for 24 h to 50 U/ml of IL-1 was added at volume concentrations of 5, 10, and 25% to MBMC at the time of transfer to lymphoid bone marrow culture conditions and at each feeding thereafter. Expression of the B lineage associated 14.8 Ag and IgM was inhibited on a dose dependent basis, and myelopoiesis was sustained in cultures to which 25% CM had been added. Induction of B lymphopoiesis occurred in cultures to which adherent cell CM not exposed to IL-1 had been added. The CM from the IL-1-treated adherent cells contained CSF, because it promoted the growth of myeloid colonies from fresh marrow or MBMC cells and stimulated the granulocyte-macrophage-CSF sensitive FDC-P1 cell line to proliferate. IL-3 was not present in the CM, because stimulation of the IL-3 sensitive 32D cell line was not observed. The CM from the IL-1-treated adherent cells stimulated thymocytes to proliferate in the presence of PHA. This raised the possibility that the induced CSF may have required IL-1 to mediate their effects in the cultures. However, B lymphopoiesis was inhibited and myelopoiesis maintained upon addition of recombinant granulocyte-, macrophage-, and granulocyte-macrophage-CSF to cultures, indicating that IL-1 or other non-CSF molecules induced by it need not be present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The ability of purified human macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) to accelerate the formation of stromal cells from murine bone marrow cells was investigated. The liquid culture of the marrow cells with M-CSF resulted in the formation of monolayers of macrophages on day 7. When the M-CSF was removed on that day and the residual adherent cells were cultured in the absence of M-CSF for an additional 7 days, many colonies appeared with cells that were morphologically distinguishable from M-CSF-derived macrophages. The appearance of the colonies was dependent on the concentration of M-CSF used at the beginning of the culture. Each colony was isolated as a single clone and analyzed. All clones were negative for esterase staining. These cells did not express M-CSF receptor mRNA and did not show a mitogenic response to M-CSF. On the contrary, these cells could be stimulated to proliferate by fibroblast growth factor and platelet-derived growth factor. The polymerase chain reaction analysis of these cells demonstrated constitutive expression of mRNA for M-CSF, stem cell factor, and interleukin (IL)-1, but not IL-3. Some clones expressed mRNA for granulocyte/M-CSF and IL-6. We also examined the ability of the cells to maintain murine bone marrow high proliferative potential colony-forming cells (HPP-CFC) in a coculture system. Most of the clones showed a significant increase in total HPP-CFC numbers after 2 weeks of coculture, although the extent of stimulation differed among clones. These results suggested that the colonies established by M-CSF were composed of functional stromal cells that were phenotypically different from macrophages. J. Cell. Physiol. 173:1–9, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
The derivation of human macrophages from peripheral blood monocytes remains a convenient method for the study of macrophage biology. However, for macrophage differentiation, a significant proportion of development has occurred prior to the monocyte stage; monocyte subsets also have varying potential for differentiation. Differentiation of macrophages from a less mature precursor, such as CD34+ haematopoietic stem cells, can further inform with regard to the development of macrophage-lineage cells. CD34+ cells were cultured in serum-free medium containing Flt3L, SCF, IL-3, IL-6 and M-CSF. Using differing combinations of growth factors, the effect on cell proliferation and differentiation to adherent macrophage-like cells was determined. The proliferative response of CD34+ cells to M-CSF was determined during the initial phase of cell culture. Thirteen combinations of SCF, IL-3, IL-6 and M-CSF were then compared to determine the optimum combination for proliferation. Adherence was used to isolate mature macrophages, and the macrophage-like phenotype was confirmed by analyses of surface markers, histo-morphology and phagocytosis. This study refines the means by which large numbers of macrophages are obtained under serum-free conditions from haematopoietic precursors.  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of this study was to analyze the effects of recombinant human interleukin 4 (IL-4) on the differentiation and proliferation in vitro of human granulocyte/macrophage (GM) and erythroid progenitors. IL-4 was added to either fetal bovine serum (FBS)-supplemented or to FBS-deprived cultures of unfractionated human marrow cells or marrow cells depleted of adherent and/or T cells. Paradoxical effects similar to those reported in the murine system were detected in these experiments. In FBS-supplemented cultures, IL-4, which had no effect on the growth or erythroid bursts (from burst-forming cells; BFU-E) detected in the presence of Epo alone, decreased by 46% the number of erythroid bursts detected in the presence of Epo and phytohemagglutinin-stimulated leukocyte-conditioned medium (PHA-LCM). In contrast, in FBS-deprived cultures, IL-4 increased by 30-700% the number of erythroid bursts in cultures containing Epo alone or containing Epo, IL-3, and GM-CSF. The stimulatory effect of IL-4 on erythroid burst growth under FBS-deprived conditions was particularly evident when adherent cells were removed. Under the conditions investigated, IL-4 had little effect on the growth of GM colonies. In FBS-deprived suspension cultures of nonadherent, T-cell-depleted marrow cells, IL-4 maintained both the number of BFU-E and CFU-GM for at least 8 days. In these cultures, IL-4 antagonized the capacity of IL-3 to increase the number of BFU-E but IL-4 and IL-3 acted together to maintain the number of CFU-GM. To determine if IL-4 acted directly or indirectly, its effects on the growth of factor-dependent subclones of the murine progenitor cell line 32D were analyzed. Three subclones were studied: the original IL-3-dependent clone 32D cl.3, the Epo-dependent erythroid clone 32D Epo-1, and the G-CSF-dependent myeloid clone 32D G-1. IL-4 alone failed to induce colony growth from these cell lines. However, IL-4 inhibited by 25% the number of colonies formed by 32D cl.3 in the presence of IL-3 while increasing by 25% and 25-50% the number of colonies formed by 32D Epo-1 and 32D G-1 in the presence of Epo or G-CSF, respectively. These results indicate that human IL-4, as its murine counterpart, is a multilineage growth factor with paradoxical effects which are mediated by the direct action of IL-4 on progenitor cells.  相似文献   

7.
The production, survival and function of monocytes and macrophages are regulated by the macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF or CSF-1) through its tyrosine kinase receptor Fms. Binding of M-CSF results in Fms autophosphorylation on specific tyrosines that act as docking sites for intracellular signaling molecules containing SH2 domains. Using a yeast two-hybrid screen, we cloned a novel adaptor protein which we called 'Mona' for monocytic adaptor. Mona contains one SH2 domain and two SH3 domains related to the Grb2 adaptor. Accordingly, Mona interacts with activated Fms on phosphorylated Tyr697, which is also the Grb2-binding site. Furthermore, Mona contains a unique proline-rich region located between the SH2 domain and the C-terminal SH3 domain, and is apparently devoid of any catalytic domain. Mona expression is restricted to two hematopoietic tissues: the spleen and the peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and is induced rapidly during monocytic differentiation of the myeloid NFS-60 cell line in response to M-CSF. Strikingly, overexpression of Mona in bone marrow cells results in strong reduction of M-CSF-dependent macrophage production in vitro. Taken together, our results suggest an important role for Mona in the regulation of monocyte/macrophage development as controlled by M-CSF.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Tumor exosomes inhibit differentiation of bone marrow dendritic cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The production of exosomes by tumor cells has been implicated in tumor-associated immune suppression. In this study, we show that, in mice, exosomes produced by TS/A murine mammary tumor cells target CD11b(+) myeloid precursors in the bone marrow (BM) in vivo, and that this is associated with an accumulation of myeloid precursors in the spleen. Moreover, we demonstrate that TS/A exosomes block the differentiation of murine myeloid precursor cells into dendritic cells (DC) in vitro. Addition of tumor exosomes at day 0 led to a significant block of differentiation into DC, whereas addition at later time points was less effective. Similarly, exosomes produced by human breast tumor cells inhibited the differentiation of human monocytes in vitro. The levels of IL-6 and phosphorylated Stat3 were elevated 12 h after the tumor exosome stimulation of murine myeloid precursors, and tumor exosomes were less effective in inhibiting differentiation of BM cells isolated from IL-6 knockout mice. Addition of a rIL-6 to the IL-6 knockout BM cell culture restored the tumor exosome-mediated inhibition of DC differentiation. These data suggest that tumor exosome-mediated induction of IL-6 plays a role in blocking BM DC differentiation.  相似文献   

10.
P Hunt  D Robertson  D Weiss  D Rennick  F Lee  O N Witte 《Cell》1987,48(6):997-1007
A clonal cell line (ALC) derived from murine bone marrow stroma is capable of supporting the continuous, in vitro growth of early lymphoid and myeloid cell populations. The growth-promoting effects of ALC are in part mediated through M-CSF and a pre-B cell growth factor, both of which accumulate in ALC-culture supernatant. To analyze the lymphoid growth factor produced by ALC cells, we derived a pre-B cell indicator line that is dependent on ALC-growth-conditioned medium. Using a combination of biological and biochemical analyses, we have established that the pre-B cell growth factor produced by ALC cells is distinct from IL-1, IL-2, IL-3, and IL-4 (BSF-1), suggesting that the early stages of B-cell development are regulated by a unique stroma-derived growth factor.  相似文献   

11.
Two cDNAs encoding the receptor for murine granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) were isolated from a CDM8 expression library of mouse myeloid leukemia NFS-60 cells, and their nucleotide sequences were determined. Murine G-CSF receptor expressed in COS cells could bind G-CSF with an affinity and specificity similar to that of the native receptor expressed by mouse NFS-60 cells. The amino acid sequence encoded by the cDNAs has demonstrated that murine G-CSF receptor is an 812 amino acid polypeptide (Mr, 90,814) with a single transmembrane domain. The extracellular domain consists of 601 amino acids with a region of 220 amino acids that shows a remarkable similarity to rat prolactin receptor. The cytoplasmic domain of the G-CSF receptor shows a significant similarity with parts of the cytoplasmic domain of murine interleukin-4 receptor. A 3.7 kb mRNA coding for the G-CSF receptor could be detected in mouse myeloid leukemia NFS-60 and WEHI-3B D+ cells as well as in bone marrow cells.  相似文献   

12.
The growth of primitive murine hematopoietic progenitors, high proliferative potential colony-forming cells (HPP-CFC), has been reported to be improved in low O2 tension cultures. In this report we investigated the growth of HPP-CFC stimulated by combinations of interleukin (IL)-1, IL-6, kit-ligand (KL), granulocyte (G) colony-stimulating factor (CSF), macrophage-CSF (M-CSF), granulocyte-macrophage-CSF (GM-CSF) and IL-3 in clonal cultures incubated at 7% or 21% O2 tension. Neither the numbers of HPP-CFC colonies nor the number of cells per HPP-CFC colony differed significantly between cultures grown under 7% or 21% O2 tension. The mean number of cells per HPP-CFC colony was found to range from 3.9 x 10(4) to 2.2 x 10(5). The smallest HPP-CFC colonies were stimulated by the cytokine combination IL-1 + IL-6 + KL, whereas the largest colonies were stimulated by a combination of all seven cytokines tested. The growth of erythroid colonies from murine or human bone marrow did, however, show some enhancement when cultured at a lower O2 tension. These results demonstrate that the growth of murine HPP-CFC was not compromised when cultured at ambient O2 concentration.  相似文献   

13.
GM-CSF and M-CSF (CSF-1) can enhance macrophage lineage numbers as well as modulate their differentiation and function. Of recent potential significance for the therapy of inflammatory/autoimmune diseases, their blockade in relevant animal models leads to a reduction in disease activity. What the critical actions are of these CSFs on macrophages during inflammatory reactions are unknown. To address this issue, adherent macrophages (GM-BMM and BMM) were first derived from murine bone marrow precursors by GM-CSF and M-CSF, respectively, and stimulated in vitro with LPS to measure secreted cytokine production, as well as NF-kappaB and AP-1 activities. GM-BMM preferentially produced TNF-alpha, IL-6, IL-12p70, and IL-23 whereas, conversely, BMM generated more IL-10 and CCL2; strikingly the latter population could not produce detectable IL-12p70 and IL-23. Following LPS stimulation, GM-BMM displayed rapid IkappaBalpha degradation, RelA nuclear translocation, and NF-kappaB DNA binding relative to BMM, as well as a faster and enhanced AP-1 activation. Each macrophage population was also pretreated with the other CSF before LPS stimulation and found to adopt the phenotype of the other population to some extent as judged by cytokine production and NF-kappaB activity. Thus, GM-CSF and M-CSF demonstrate, at the level of macrophage cytokine production, different and even competing responses with implications for their respective roles in inflammation, including a possible dampening or suppressive role for M-CSF in certain circumstances.  相似文献   

14.
Neither lytic NK cells nor IL-2-responsive NK precursors were produced in myeloid (Dexter) long-term bone marrow cultures (LTBMC). However, when myeloid LTBMC were switched to lymphoid (Whitlock-Witte) conditions and reseeded ("recharged") with fresh bone marrow cells (BMC), nonadherent cells with NK lytic activity and NK 1.1+ phenotype were produced within 1-2 weeks without the addition of exogenous IL-2 to the cultures. NK- and T cell-depleted BMC proliferated extensively in switched cultures and in 2 weeks generated cells that lysed the NK target YAC-1 but not the LAK target P815. The presence of NK precursors in the cultures was confirmed by reculturing nonadherent cells harvested from recharged LTBMC in fresh medium containing 50 U rIL-2/ml. High levels of NK lytic activity were generated. Sequential expression of NK 1.1 and IL-2 responsiveness followed by lytic activity was demonstrated by harvesting cells early after recharge, prior to the appearance of lytic cells. Elimination of NK 1.1+ cells depleted the ability to respond to IL-2 in secondary culture. Our studies demonstrate that myeloid-to-lymphoid switched LTBMC support the proliferation and differentiation of NK lineage cells from their NK 1.1-, nonlytic progenitors in the absence of an exogenous source of growth factors.  相似文献   

15.
We have investigated the effect of growth factors, inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines on the macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) secretion by cultured human bone marrow stromal cells. Their production of M-CSF cultured in serum-free medium is enhanced in a time-dependent manner in response to tumour necrosis factor (TNF-)alpha and interleukin (IL-)4 but not to IL-1, IL-3, IL-6, IL-7, IL-10, SCF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), G-CSF, bFGF and transforming growth factor (TGF-)beta. The co-addition of IL-4 and TNF-alpha has a greater than additive effect on the secretion of M-CSF suggesting that they act synergistically. The anti-inflammatory molecules IL-10 and TGF-beta have no effect on the TNF-alpha-induced M-CSF synthesis by marrow stromal cells. In conclusion TNF-alpha and IL-4 are potent stimulators of the M-CSF synthesis by human bone marrow stromal cells, a result of importance regarding the role of M-CSF in the proliferation/differentiation of mononuclear-phagocytic cells and the role of marrow stromal cells as regulators of marrow haematopoiesis.  相似文献   

16.
The production of B lymphocytes and myeloid cells occurs in the bone marrow in association with a supporting population of stromal cells. To determine whether these processes are dependent upon the same or different populations of stromal cells, stromal cell lines were generated from the adherent layer of a Dexter type long-term bone marrow culture. These cultures support myeloid cells and their precursors, a B cell precursor, and the adherent layer cells with support B cell differentiation under appropriate conditions. Two of the lines examined, S10 and S17, express class I histocompatibility antigens but not other hemopoietic cell surface determinants such as Thy-1, Lyt-1, Ig, Ia, Mac-1, or BP-1. Both lines could support myelopoiesis under Dexter conditions upon seeding with nylon wool-passed bone marrow. The nylon wool passage depletes stromal cells capable of forming adherent layers in vitro but retains hemopoietic precursors. The number of cells and colony-forming units-granulocytes/macrophages in the nonadherent cell population recovered 3 wk post-seeding had increased 19-fold and 10-fold, respectively, in the reseeded cultures of S10 and S17. After 3 wk of growth in Dexter conditions, the reseeded cultures were transferred to conditions optimal for B cell differentiation described by Whitlock and Witte. After 4 wk of growth, hemopoietic cells were consistently recovered from S17 cultures but not those of S10. A proportion of these cells from S17 cultures expressed the 14.8 antigen and were surface IgM positive. Surviving hemopoietic cells present in cultures of S10 were primarily macrophages. These findings indicate that S17 but not S10 can support both myelopoiesis and B lymphopoiesis and suggest that one stromal cell population has the capacity to form a hemopoietic microenvironment for both lineages.  相似文献   

17.
Maintenance and regulation of natural killer (NK) cell activity in human bone marrow cultures were studied using K562 leukemia cells as targets. Culture of bone marrow cells in medium supporting long-term generation of myeloid cells resulted in a rapid loss of NK activity in 1-3 days. In contrast, antibody-dependent cytotoxicity to an NK-resistant tumor was maintained for more than 7 weeks. Horse serum, a component of the myelopoietic culture medium, was found to diminish NK cytotoxicity of blood and bone marrow cultures whereas hydrocortisone supplement did not. In addition, an adherent cell is present in bone marrow which greatly inhibits NK activity. Nonadherent bone marrow cells exhibited higher cytotoxicity than unfractionated cells at all days of culture; adherent cells were not cytotoxic to K562. Purified adherent marrow cells inhibited the cytotoxic capacity of nonadherent blood or marrow mononuclear cells during coculture. Indomethacin, an inhibitor of protaglandin synthesis, augmented levels of NK activity in cultures of bone marrow cells, indicating that macrophages may be suppressing this effector function via prostaglandins. Further identification of the adherent suppressor cells came from experiments in which suppression was prevented by treatment of the adherent cells with monoclonal OKM1 antibody plus complement. This study shows that bone marrow-adherent OKM1-positive cells, presumably macrophages, negatively regulate NK activity, and it defines conditions for analysis of the generation and/or positive regulation of NK cells in human bone marrow.  相似文献   

18.
Osteoclasts (OCs) are large, multinucleated bone resorbing cells originating from the bone marrow myeloid lineage, and share a common progenitor with macrophages and dendritic cells. Bone marrow cells (BMCs) are a common source for in vitro osteoclastogenesis assays but are a highly heterogeneous mixture of cells. Protocols for in vitro osteoclastogenesis vary considerably thus hindering interpretation and comparison of results between studies. Macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) pretreatment is commonly used to expand OC progenitors (OCPs) in BMC cultures before in vitro differentiation. However, the failure of osteoclastogenesis of M-CSF primed bone marrow myeloid blasts has been reported. In this study, we used a simple method of differential adherence to plastic to enrich OCP from mouse BMCs. We found that M-CSF pretreatment of plastic-adherent BMCs (adBMCs) increased the number of CD11b-F4/80+ macrophages and decreased the number of CD11b+ monocytes resulting in decreased OC formation. M-CSF pretreatment of purified c-Kit+ progenitors weakly inhibited OC formation, whereas M-CSF pretreatment of purified c-Kit-CD11b+ progenitors promoted the formation of large OC. M-CSF pretreatment increased the proliferation of both purified c-Kit+ and c-Kit-CD11b+ cells and increased the percentage of CD11b-F4/80+ cells from c-Kit+ progenitors. In addition, M-CSF pretreatment increased the percentage of CD11b+ F4/80− cells from purified c-Kit-CD11b+ cells. M-CSF pretreatment increased the percentage of CD14 + CD16 + intermediate monocytes and subsequent OC formation from human 2adBMCs, and increased OC formation of purified CD14 + cells. Together, these results indicate that in vitro OCP expansion in the presence of M-CSF and bone marrow stromal cells is dependent upon the developmental stage of myeloid cells, in which M-CSF favors macrophage differentiation of multipotent progenitors, promotes monocyte maturation and supports differentiation of late-stage OCP cells.  相似文献   

19.
In a previous study, colony-stimulating factor (CSF) activity assayed in colony culture correlated closely with 3HTdR uptake by human marrow cells depleted of adherent cells. To use this assay for screening media for CSF and immunotoxins for marrow toxicity, cells growing in liquid culture were compared to conventional granulocyte/macrophage (CFU-gm) colony assays. CSF dose-response relationships for liquid and colony-forming assays were nearly identical. 3HTdR uptake by nonadherent marrow cells was CSF dose-related, and there was a linear relationship between number of cells cultured and 3HTdR uptake. Ricin cytotoxicity curves for liquid cultures and CFU-gm were identical on day 7 but showed some disparity with day 14 cultures. Results with all cultures showed 3HTdR uptake to be most closely correlated with CFU-gm colony, rather than cluster, growth. Myeloid cell differentiation in liquid culture was similar to colony cultures, producing mixtures of granulocytes, macrophages and eosinophils. By combining cell and differential counts, production of various myeloid cells could be quantitated. Cytotoxicity of anti-Ia for CFU-gm and liquid culture cells was compared and the majority of both cell populations expressed Ia-like antigens. Simultaneous staining for surface antigens and DNA content was used to characterize proliferating marrow cells, and the vast majority of cells expressed myeloid markers. Transferrin receptors were displayed by cells in S/G2/M and appeared after CSF stimulation on G0/G1 cells. We conclude liquid cultures can be used to screen conditioned media for human CSF and to screen for cytotoxicity to normal myeloid precursor cells. Behavior of CSF-responsive cells in liquid culture appears most closely related to that of CFU-gm colony-forming cells, and characterization of CSF-stimulated cells allows quantitative as well as qualitative estimates of myeloid cell production.  相似文献   

20.
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