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1.
本研究用铜蒸气激光照射人脐带带血造血细胞,观察低能量激光与集落因子对造血细胞的增殖作用。结果显示激光加CSF对造血细胞GM-CFUc有协同增殖作用,与单用激光照射组,CSF刺激组及对照组相比,有非常显著性差异。  相似文献   

2.
D. C. Morley  Jr  P. R. Galbraith 《CMAJ》1978,118(3):288-290
Lithium carbonate therapy is associated with polymorphonuclear leukocytosis. In vitro studies have shown that lithium ions stimulate formation of granulocytic colonies. In a study undertaken to determine how lithium acts, colony-forming cells uncontaminated by monocytes (which elaborate colony-stimulating factor [CSF] in vitro) were obtained by means of a two-step cell separation procedure. The effects of lithium on colony formation were then studied in (a) cultures stimulated by humoral CSF, (b) cultures in which monocytes were relied upon to synthesize CSF de novo and (c) unstimulated cultures. Lithium enhanced the action of CSF but did not stimulate colony formation in the absence of CSF. In monocyte-stimulated cultures, colony formation increased with lithium concentrations up to 1 mmol/L but this increase paralleled that in CSF-stimulated cultures and therefore was not due to increased CSF production by monocytes. At higher concentrations of lithium, colony formation decreased in the monocyte-stimulated cultures but increased in the CSF-stimulated cultures. A lithium concentration of 4 mmol/L gave the greatest enhancing effect on colony formation in CSF-stimulated cultures and a concentration greater than 1 mmol/L inhibited de novo synthesis of CSF by monocytes.  相似文献   

3.
Equilibrium density centrifugation was used to characterise and separate subpopulations of mouse haemopoietic progenitor cells capable of producing colonies of granulocytes and macrophages in vitro. The material used to induce colony formation (CSF) was prepared from an extract of pregnant mouse uteri. This CSF preparation was found to be free of factors modifying the response. Under these culture conditions, in vitro colony forming cells (CFU-c) were found to be relatively homogeneous in their buoyant density. This homogeneity was independent of CSF concentration. A heterogeneous density profile of CFU-c was obtained when various cell fractions were cultured in the presence of CSF and rat blood lysate. The majority of the additional cells which responded to erythrocyte lysate were dense (modal density 1.080 g/cm3) compared to CFU-c which respond to CSF alone (modal density 1.074 g/cm3). It is concluded that in vitro colonies induced by CSF and in vitro colonies grown in the presence of CSF and erythrocyte lysate reflect two different populations of CFU-c.  相似文献   

4.
T cell regulation of myelopoiesis: analysis at a clonal level   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Colony-stimulating factor (CSF) production by a series of cloned human T lymphocyte cell lines was examined by substituting cloned T cells for peripheral blood mononuclear cells in the feeder layer of a double-layer agar CFU-C assay system. Of 12 T cell lines tested, all produced CSF when stimulated by specific antigen, whereas CSF production in the absence of stimulation was generally negligible. In the case of soluble antigen-specific (ragweed or tetanus toxoid) clones, this required both nominal antigen and the appropriate MHC gene product on autologous antigen-presenting cells, whereas in the case of clones specific for EBV-transformed B cell lines (allogeneic or autologous), surface-bound EBV-related antigen and MHC was necessary. When tested in this manner, CSF production by different cloned T cells was heterogeneous in both amount and subclass. Thus, although most clones stimulated growth of granulocyte, monocyte, and eosinophil colonies, certain clones were identified which preferentially stimulated some colony types but not others. This heterogeneity was particularly evident with respect to eosinophil colony production. In addition, a soluble inhibitor of granulocyte colony growth was produced by one clone. These findings provide further support for the notion that antigen-specific T cells may, on activation, regulate myelopoiesis in a precise way, and provide a possible cellular basis for selective eosinophilia, monocytosis, or neutrophilia seen in certain disease states.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of okadaic acid, a potent non-12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate(TPA)-type tumor promoter, on mouse hemopoietic cells were investigated. Okadaic acid stimulated mouse bone marrow cells to form granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming unit (CFU-GM) colonies without added colony stimulating factors(CSFs). At the concentration of 1.82 x 10(-8) M, colony formation of 77 +/- 14 colonies/1 x 10(5) bone marrow cells was observed. Observations on the effects of other cells on the CSF induction suggested that okadaic acid primarily stimulated the functions of macrophages, and the CSF production from macrophages might be attributed to the CFU-GM colony formation. On the other hand, the erythroid colony-forming unit(CFU-E) colony formation stimulated by  相似文献   

6.
Vindesine (VDS) is a new vinca-alkaloid related to vinblastine and vincristine that blocks production of the microtubules in the mitotic phase of the cell cycle. Studies were undertaken to investigate the inhibitory effect of VDS on normal murine bone marrow cell proliferation and the possible interactions between this compound and L-cell derived colony stimulating factor (CSF). One X 10(7) murine bone marrow cells were exposed to various concentrations of VDS, ranging from 0.1 to 1.5 micrograms/ml for 1 h at 37 degrees C. Following this period, the cells were plated in agar in the presence of 100 units of CSF. A dose-dependent inhibition of colony formation was noted with increasing doses of the drugs. To determine whether an increased dose of CSF could overcome the inhibitory effect of VDS, further studies compared colony growth in response to 100 and 200 units of CSF. Virtually no inhibition of colony growth was detected in VDS-treated cells exposed to this higher dose of CSF while a dose-dependent reduction in CFU-C was noted with 100 units of CSF. Preincubation of cells with VDS and CSF prevented the inhibition that occurred with VDS alone. The addition of anti-CSF serum during the preincubation phase abolished the protective effect of CSF. The studies show that short-term exposure of marrow cells to VDS causes a dose-dependent inhibition of in vitro colony formation; this inhibition is prevented by increasing doses of CSF in agar culture or by simultaneous preincubation with CSF. The CSF action appears specific as its protective effect is neutralized by antibody to CSF, suggesting a potential role for CSF in preventing the antimitotic activity of VDS.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of three purified colony-stimulating factors (CSFs) with different specificities for the granulocyte (G) and macrophage (M) lineages (G-CSF, CSF-1 and GM-CSF) were studied in a serum-free clonal assay system. The results were compared with those obtained in similar cultures containing fetal calf serum (FCS). Total clone (greater than or equal to 10 cells) and colony (greater than or equal to 50 cells) numbers were enhanced by FCS under most conditions. However, the extent of enhancement was highly dependent on the concentration and type of CSF. In some instances, FCS also altered the proportions of G, M, and mixed GM clones induced by the CSFs. In cultures stimulated with GM-CSF, enhancement by FCS was significant only at low CSF concentrations, primarily due to increased numbers of M clones. In contrast, clonal growth was increased by FCS only at high concentrations of CSF-1. Clone and colony numbers induced by G-CSF were greatly increased in cultures with FCS at all CSF concentrations tested. Virtually all clones developing in serum-free medium with G-CSF were pure G, whereas, M and GM clones were usually present in serum-containing cultures with high doses of G-CSF. The effects of hydrocortisone (HC) were also examined in these experiments. Like modulation by FCS, modulation of clonal growth by HC depended on the CSF used as stimulus, having no effect in cultures with G-CSF, inhibitory effects with CSF-1, and variable effects with GM-CSF related to CSF concentration.  相似文献   

8.
Tumor promoting phorbol esters, such as 12-0-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), stimulate colony formation in vitro by murine granulocyte-macrophage progenitors (GM-CFC) without added colony stimulating factors (CSF). To determine whether TPA induces CSF production in vitro, marrow cells were cultured for 1 to 7 days in liquid medium with or without TPA. No CSF was detected in any sample by a double antibody radioimmunoassay (sensitivity = 2 units/0.1 ml), however, colony-stimulating activity was detected in supernatant fluid from all TPA containing cultures by bioassay. This activity appeared to result from a direct effect of TPA rather than from production of CSF, as equivalent activity was found in TPA-containing medium incubated in the absence of marrow cells. Rabbit antiserum to purified L-cell CSF inhibited colony formation stimulated by L-cell CSF and WEHI-3 CSF, but had no effect on colony formation induced by TPA. Cells from long-term marrow cultures responded to TPA with colony formation, despite culture conditions and cell fractionation procedures that reduced the frequency of CSF-producing macrophages to less than 1.0%. TPA inhibited binding of radioiodinated L-cell CSF to marrow cells, especially if the cells were first exposed to TPA. These results do not support induction of CSF production as the major mechanism of phorbol ester stimulation of myelopoiesis. Phorbol esters may directly stimulate GM-CFC and/or enhance their response to CSF by a mechanism involving CSF binding sites.  相似文献   

9.
This report examines the actions of IFN-gamma on monocytopoiesis in murine liquid and semisolid bone marrow cultures. The proliferative response of bone marrow cells to macrophage CSF and granulocyte-macrophage CSF was assayed by measuring [3H]TdR uptake in a range of mouse strains. No interstrain difference in kinetics was observed for CSF-1 action, but GM-CSF acted significantly more rapidly on C57B1/6, Swiss, and to a lesser extent A/J mice than on BALB/c or CBA. IFN-gamma inhibited [3H]TdR incorporation elicited by CSF-1, and to a much lesser extent, GM-CSF. When the two CSF were added together, the effects were not additive; in fact, the response was the same as that seen with GM-CSF alone. When IFN-gamma was also added, the response was restored to the level seen with CSF-1 alone. In essence, the inhibitory actions of GM-CSF and IFN-gamma were mutually exclusive. The mechanism of these actions was investigated using colony assays. As expected, CSF-1 caused the formation of pure macrophage colonies, whereas GM-CSF stimulated production of macrophage, granulocyte, and mixed granulocyte macrophage colonies. When the two CSF were added in combination, the total colony count was greater than with either alone, but less than additive. The number of pure macrophage colonies was reduced to the number seen with GM-CSF alone. IFN-gamma reduced the number of colonies in the presence of CSF-1, but slightly increased the number with GM-CSF. In the presence of both CSF, IFN-gamma increased the colony count by around 25 to 40%, so that the numbers were greater than the combined total of CSF-1 plus GM-CSF added separately. Similar results were obtained in all mouse strains tested. The results suggest that the thymidine uptake data reflect changes in the number of progenitor cells responding rather than changes in cell cycle time. The results are discussed in terms of the possibility that coadministration of GM-CSF and CSF-1 could ameliorate the myelosuppressive actions of IFN-gamma in vivo, leading to more effective use of this agent as a biologic response modifier.  相似文献   

10.
Serum from mice traated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was fractionated by Con A-Sepharose affinity chromatography, and assayed in vitro for colony-stimulating factor (CSF) using mouse bone marrow cells. The CSF failing to bind to concanavalin A-Sepharose (pool A) had similar biological properties to the unfractionated serum, i.e., it stimulated the formation of about equal numbers of granulocytic, mixed granulocyte-macrophage and macrophage colonies. The fraction eluted from the Con A-Sepharose column with α-methyl-D-glucopyranoside (pool B) had a steeper dose-response curve than either the unfractionated serum or the pool A CSF and most of the colonies were composed of macrophages. A mixture of the pool A and pool B CSFs stimulated colonies in a similar way as unfractionated serum and pool A. The apparent molecular weights of the two types of CSF were determined by two different gel-filtration procedures. Sephacryl S-200 gel-filtration suggested an apparent molecular weight of 85,000 for pool A CSF and 180,000 for pool B CSF. Gel-filtration on Sepharose CL-6B in the presence of guanidine hydrochloride (6M) yielded an apparent molecular weight of approximately 23,000 for pool A CSF and 33,000 for pool B CSF. The colony-forming cells (CFC) responding to pool B CSF were found to have a relatively high sedimentation velocity (peak sedimentation velocity 5.6–6.2 mm/hr) compared to the CFC responding to mouse-lung conditioned medium (MLCM) whose peak sedimentation velocity was between 4.0–4.5 mm/hour. The CFC responding to pool A CSF had an intermediate sedimentation velocity (peak 4.6–5.2 mm/hour). A time-course analysis of the morphology of clones or colonies in cultures stimulated with either MLCM or pool B CSF showed that the proporation of different colony types depends significantly on the incubation period and suggested that pool B CSF induced an early commitment of CFC towards macrophage differentiation.  相似文献   

11.
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   

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.
Colony formation by mouse granulocyte/macrophage progenitors (GM-CFU) responding to purified colony-stimulating factors (CSF) in serum-free cultures is described. Analysis of the lipid requirements for colony growth stimulated by purified macrophage CSF (M-CSF) demonstrated that cholesterol is essential. Linoleic acid further promoted colony growth only if cholesterol was present, but phospholipid was inhibitory. More colonies were obtained in serum-free cultures, than in serum-supplemented controls. This difference could not be attributed to a change in the range of sensitivity to M-CSF. Stimulation of GM-CFU with granulocyte/macrophage CSF (GM-CSF) required further supplementation with hydrocortisone for optimal expression of colony-forming capacity in serum-free cultures. Hydrocortisone slightly inhibited colony growth stimulated with M-CSF. Under these culture conditions, the number of GM-CFU responding to GM-CSF was twice that obtained with M-CSF.  相似文献   

14.
Human fetal bone marrow (FBM) cells were examined for the ability to form colonies in the absence of exogenous colony-stimulating factor (CSF) in double layer agar, methylcellulose (MC), and in agar-MC (agar underlayer, MC overlayer) culture systems. Without exogenous CSF, macrophage colonies (M-CFC) were formed in a combined culture of agar and MC. Aggregates of 5-40 cells were observed on day 7. Gradually, large compact colonies which survived for 10-12 weeks of cultivation, were formed. They were composed of mononuclear monocytes and multinucleated cells. M-CFC progenitors were nonadherent, but their progeny became adherent during differentiation within the colony. Colony formation was cell-dose-dependent. Depletion of monocytes increased the number of colonies in agar-MC cultures and stimulated the development of some macrophage colonies in MC. Survival of monocyte progenitors was not dependent on CSF. Neither was their proliferation nor partial differentiation in agar-MC cultures. CSF increased M-CFC colony efficiency, however, if it was present when cultures were initiated. Addition of CSF to M-CFC growing for 2-5 weeks in CSF-deprived medium stimulated monocytes proliferation and transformation into macrophages. Epithelioid cells, an increase in the number of giant multinucleated cells, and granulocyte multiplication were also observed. The absolute dependence of macrophage colony formation on CSF described by others might be a result of inadequate culture conditions due to agar rather than an intrinsic physiological requirement.  相似文献   

15.
The influence of purified recombinant human TNF-alpha (rhuTNF-alpha) was assessed, alone and in combination with purified recombinant human IFN-gamma (rhuIFN-gamma), for its effects on enhancing release from human T lymphocytes of activities that stimulate colony formation by granulocyte-macrophage, erythroid, and multipotential progenitor cells. rhuTNF-alpha or rhuIFN-gamma enhanced the release of CSF, which were determined to be granulocyte-CSF and granulocyte-macrophage-CSF by human bone marrow colony assays, morphologic assessment of colony types, and neutralization studies with rabbit anti-human granulocyte-CSF and monoclonal mouse anti-human granulocyte-macrophage-CSF. The CSF were released only when PHA was used, whether or not rhuTNF-alpha and/or rhuIFN-gamma were present while the lymphocytes conditioned the medium. T lymphocytes were sorted into subsets by using three-color immunofluorescence and a dye laser flow cytometry system with cells incubated with biotin anti-Leu-4 labeled with Texas Red, FITC-conjugated anti-Leu-3a, and phycoerythrin-conjugated anti-Leu-2a. Both the Leu-4+3a+2a- and the Leu-4+2a+3a- cells released CSF in response to PHA, but the release of CSF from PHA-stimulated lymphocytes was enhanced by rhuTNF-alpha and rhuIFN-gamma only from the Leu-4+3a+2a- subset of cells. Use of the three-color cell sorting made it highly unlikely that NK cells were involved, because both sorted subsets were positive for Leu-4. rhuTNF-alpha and rhuIFN-gamma synergized to enhance release of CSF such that low concentrations of each molecule, which were inactive when used alone, were active when the two molecules were used together. These studies suggest a role, at least in vitro, for TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma in the release of CSF from subsets of T lymphocytes stimulated with PHA.  相似文献   

16.
Studies were performed to characterize the human peripheral blood non-T cells forming colonies in semisolid cultures stimulated with Staph protein A (SpA). Negative selection experiments revealed that colony precursors largely consisted of cells bearing Fc receptors, complement receptors (CR), surface immunoglobulin (sIg), and Ia-like antigens. Most colony precursors expressed sIgM and sIgD, but not sIgG. Also, colony-forming cells were shown to be distinct from non-T cells proliferating in SpA-stimulated liquid cultures as evidenced by the greater sensitivity of colony precursors to anti-K,λ, or -Ia plus complement depletion. Two distinct categories of colony-forming cells could be distinguished by the expression of CR. CR-positive cells were responsible for greater than 85% of the colonies formed in the absence of optimal T cell numbers. Although under identical conditions CR? cells demonstrated minimal colony growth, the addition of optimal T cell numbers significantly augmented colony responses. Thus, colony precursors express surface markers characteristic of B cells relatively advanced in the developmental pathway. However, less advanced cells are capable of colony growth in the presence of optimal T cell numbers.  相似文献   

17.
The radiosensitivity of populations of colony-forming cells (CFC) in murine bone marrow was investigated using different recombinant colony-stimulating factors (CSFs; murine IL-3 and granulocyte-macrophage CSF and human granulocyte CSF), or purified murine macrophage CSF. With unfractionated normal bone marrow the CFC increased in radiosensitivity as they progressed through the granulocyte lineage. The D0 values ranged from 129 +/- 12 cGy for CFC stimulated with GM-CSF down to 42 +/- 2 cGy after stimulation with G-CSF. IL-3 stimulated a CFC population which gave the only survival curve with a shoulder (n = 1.9 +/- 0.3). With semipurified populations of primitive or bipotential CFC, D0 values were generally lower with respect to the equivalent values for unpurified bone marrow (range 62 +/- 7 cGy to 135 +/- 7 cGy). Changes in cluster/colony ratio and colony morphology together possibly with products of accessory cells influence the interpretation of the radiosensitivity parameters.  相似文献   

18.
Clonal growth in semisolid agar medium was obtained using cells from 19 of 25 transplanted murine plasmacytomas when the medium was supplemented by whole mouse blood or washed red cells. With different tumors cloning efficiency ranged from 0.01% to 21.6%. With two exceptions, mouse blood did not potentiate colony formation in agar by cells from transplantable myelomonocytic, myeloid, and lymphoid leukemias, reticulum cell sarcomas and fibrosarcomas. The clonal growth of some plasmacytomas was also potentiated by syngeneic thymic, spleen or bone marrow cells. Plasmacytoma colony growth was not stimulated by normal mouse serum but serum from mice injected with endotoxin or polymerised flagellin stimulated colony growth by some plasmacytomas. The active serum factor was not the colony stimulating factor (CSF) and its appearance after antigenic stimulation was not T cell-dependent. Preimmunised mice failed tq respond to antigenic stimulation. Whole body irradiation did not induce a rise in the capacity of serum to stimulate colony formation by plasmacytoma cells.  相似文献   

19.
We have employed bifunctional T cell hybridomas, which can be stimulated to secrete lymphokine(s) and lyse specific target cells, to analyze the effect of Cyclosporin A (CsA) on T cell helper and effector functions. We report here the effects of CsA on antigen- and lectin-induced lymphokine secretion. We have found that a pharmacologic level of CsA (10 ng/ml) blocks antigen- and lectin-driven interleukin 2 (IL 2) secretion without affecting cell proliferation. In addition, one monoclonal hybridoma that is induced by concanavalin A to secrete colony stimulating factors (CSF) as well as IL 2 is concomitantly blocked by CsA for production of IL 2 and CSF. Because the hybridomas grow constitutively and are devoid of functional IL 2 receptors, they permit analysis of the kinetics of the inhibitory response. We have shown that CsA blocks not only stimulation of lymphokine secretion but also ongoing IL 2 production, probably by interfering with the effective interaction of receptor and antigen. Thus, blocking of IL 2 secretion from preactivated cells by CsA occurs by 1 to 2 hr, the time required to stop IL 2 production by removal of Ag/Lectin stimulator. The results are consistent with a mechanism of action of CsA on T cells that involves a direct interference of CsA with binding of Ag to Ag-receptor and results in blocking of induction and active secretion of multiple lymphokines.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of biosynthetic human insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) and IGF-II on the in vitro growth of human marrow myeloid progenitors in the presence of recombinant human granulocyte colony stimulating factor (rhG-CSF), granulocyte-macrophage CSF (rhGM-CSF), or interleukin-3 (rhIL-3), was investigated. IGF-I and IGF-II similarly enhanced the growth of myeloid progenitors in cultures stimulated with any of the above hemopoietic regulators. Analysis of colony composition showed an increase in the numbers of granulocyte colonies, but no alteration in the numbers of macrophage or granulocyte/macrophage colonies. IGF-I induced an increase of 62 ± 16%, 84 ± 13%, and 107 ± 18% in granulocyte colony numbers in the presence of G-CSF, GM-CSF, or IL-3, respectively. The values for IGF-II were 66 ± 13%, 96 ± 12%, and 91 ± 12%. Similar enhancement of myeloid colony formation by both peptides was also detected in G-CSF and GM-CSF-stimulated cultures of marrow cells that had been depleted of accessory cells, while neither peptide exerted any effect in the presence of IL-3 in such cultures. The growth-promoting effects of IGF-I and IGF-II were completely abrogated by monoclonal antibodies directed against the IGF-I (Type I) membrane receptor. IGF-I and IGF-II thus appear to exert their effects on human marrow myeloid progenitors via a direct mechanism involving the Type I receptor. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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