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Myelosuppressive effects in vivo of purified recombinant murine macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha.
Authors:R Maze  B Sherry  B S Kwon  A Cerami  H E Broxmeyer
Institution:Department of Medicine (Hematology/Oncology), Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis 46202.
Abstract:Purified recombinant murine macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha (rmuMIP-1 alpha), a cytokine with myelopoietic activity in vitro, was assessed in vivo by injection into C3H/HeJ mice for effects on proliferation (percentage of cells in S phase DNA synthesis of the cell cycle) and absolute numbers of granulocyte-macrophage, erythroid, and multipotential progenitor cells in the femur and spleen, and on nucleated cellularity in the bone marrow, spleen, and blood. rmuMIP-1 alpha rapidly decreased cycling rates (at 2 to 10 micrograms/mouse i.v.) and absolute numbers (at 5 to 10 micrograms/mouse i.v.) of myeloid progenitor cells in the marrow and spleen. These effects were dose- and time-dependent and reversible. Suppressive effects were noted within 3 to 24 h for cell cycling and absolute numbers of progenitor cells in the marrow and spleen, and by 48 h for circulating neutrophils. A study comparing the effects of i.v. injection of rmuMIP-1 alpha versus rmuMIP-1 beta, a biochemically similar molecule but with no myelosuppressive effects in vitro, demonstrated myelosuppression in vivo by rmuMIP-1 alpha, but not by rmuMIP-1 beta. The results suggest that rmuMIP-1 alpha has myelosuppressive activity in vivo and offers the possibility that it may be a useful adjunct to treatments involving cytotoxic drugs because of its reversible suppressive effects on normal progenitor cell cycling.
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