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1.
In vitro cloning assays are used increasingly in investigative hematotoxicology and in screening candidate compounds for their hematotoxic potential. To expand these applications, a practical cloning assay for erythroid burst-forming units (BFU-e) that uses a microplasma clot (MPC) system was adapted to the dog, a species used extensively in experimental hematology and drug development. This system offers the advantage over the methylcellulose and soft agar culture systems of allowing specimen fixation and, therefore, morphological and cytochemical evaluation. The distribution of BFU-e among various anatomic sites was assessed using the MPC cloning system, which was modified to optimize the BFU-e growth. BFU-e growth required only erythropoietin (Epo) in the culture medium and there was no need for an exogenous source of burst-promoting activity (BPA). The cloning efficiency was linearly proportional to the plating concentrations of Epo and marrow mononuclear cells (MMC) over a range of 0 to 3 U Epo and 1 x 10(5) to 3 x 10(5) MMC per ml of culture, respectively. Increases in concentrations of Epo and MMC beyond these levels were not associated with linear growth. The addition of transferrin and spleen-conditioned medium containing a mixture of growth factors (including BPA) reduced BFU-e growth. The relative concentration of BFU-e was comparable among samples collected from the iliac crest, femur, and humerus. Serial cultures performed on individual dogs were highly reproducible and there was little variation in BFU-e activity among dogs of comparable age. It was concluded that the MPC system is a practical and reproducible cloning system for early (BFU-e), as well as late erythroid colony-forming units (CFU-e) in the dog. The concentration of BFU-e appears comparable throughout the active marrow; therefore, various anatomic sites can be used interchangeably for serial quantitative analysis of this progenitor.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of low oxygen tension on the growth of human hemopoietic progenitor cells in bone marrow was investigated using the semisolid methylcellulose colony assay. The clonal growth of granulocyte-macrophage progenitors (CFU-gm), early (BFU-e) and late (CFU-e) erythroid progenitors, megakaryocyte progenitors (CFU-meg) and pluripotent progenitors (CFU-mix) improved more markedly incubation at the low oxygen tension (5%) than in conventional air (20%). The thiol compound 2-mercaptoethanol had a strong additive effect on colony growth in conventional air, but little or no effect in the low oxygen tension. These results suggest that enhancement of colony growth in the low oxygen tension may be due to a decrease in the production of oxygen intermediates.  相似文献   

3.
Cellular and humoral influences of T lymphocytes on human megakaryocyte colony formation in vitro were assessed by using a microagar system. Megakaryocyte colony formation from nonadherent low density T lymphocyte-depleted (NALDT-) bone marrow cells was increased significantly after the addition of aplastic anemia serum (AAS) or purified megakaryocyte colony-stimulating factor (Meg-CSF). The addition of conditioned medium obtained from phytohemagglutinin-stimulated T lymphocytes replaced, at least partially, the requirement for AAS or purified Meg-CSF for the growth of megakaryocyte colonies. The cellular influence of T lymphocytes and T lymphocyte subsets on megakaryocyte colony formation was assessed by removing either T cells from nonadherent peripheral blood mononuclear cells with monoclonal OKT4, OKT8, or OKT3 antibodies plus complement, or by adding back populations of bone marrow or blood T4+ or T8+ lymphocytes, isolated by means of fluorescence-activated cell sorting, respectively, to NALDT--bone marrow or -blood cells. When sorted T cell subpopulations were added to a fixed number of NALDT--bone marrow or -peripheral blood cells in the presence of AAS or Meg-CSF, T4+ cells enhanced megakaryocyte colony formation and T8+ cells decreased it. These studies demonstrate that although the stimulation of megakaryocytic progenitor cells by Meg-CSF may not require the presence of monocytes or T lymphocytes, T4+ lymphocytes enhance and T8+ lymphocytes down-regulate megakaryocyte colony formation induced by Meg-CSF. These observations suggest that the immune system is capable of modulating the proliferative response of human megakaryocytic progenitor cells to Meg-CSF.  相似文献   

4.
We report the effect of four sources of hemopoietic growth factors, alone or in combination, on colony growth in serum-free cultures of bone marrow from normal mice or marrow from mice pre-treated with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU-bm). The four supplements were: mouse spleen conditioned medium (SCM, a source of multi-lineage colony-stimulating activity, multi-CSA), human placental conditioned medium (HPCM, a source of synergistic activity), pregnant mouse uterus extract (PMUE, a source of M-CSA) and erythropoietin (Epo). First, in cultures of normal marrow, only PMUE and SCM induced significant colony growth when added alone. The majority of those colonies contained granulocytes and macrophages (myeloid colonies). In Epo-supplemented cultures, only SCM supported the growth of erythroid bursts and mixed erythroid-myeloid colonies. HPCM thus appears to be a poor source of multi-CSA. Second, in cultures of 5-FU-bm, few colonies developed if any of the above supplements were added alone. Only SCM + Epo together stimulated the formation of a low number of very large, mixed erythroid/myeloid/megakaryocyte colonies. HPCM, but not SCM, synergized with PMUE to augment myeloid colony numbers. Hence, SCM appears to be a poor source of synergistic activity (SA). In cultures of 5-FU-bm already supplemented with HPCM + PMUE, the addition of Epo did not change total colony numbers but did induce erythroid differentiation in one third of the colonies present. These data suggest that multi-CSA and SA may be expressed by different factors and that 5-FU pre-treated marrow contains: a population of primitive multipotential progenitors which form large, mixed colonies in the presence of SCM + Epo, and a larger Epo-sensitive population which also requires HPCM + PMUE to form mixed colonies.  相似文献   

5.
Urinary extracts from idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) patients, aplastic anemia (AA) patients and normal subjects were investigated for their effects on in vivo platelet production, and both in vitro and in vivo megakaryocytopoiesis in rodents. Daily intraperitoneal injection of 1.2 absorbance units (AU, A278) of urinary protein for three consecutive days induced statistically significant increases in rat blood platelet numbers. This increase was observed for 1 of 4 ITP urinary extracts and for all 3 AA urinary extracts, and occurred 24 h after the final injection. In vitro levels of megakaryocyte colony-stimulating factor (Meg-CSF) in ITP urinary extracts were similar to those of normal urinary extracts, and were in dramatic contrast to the markedly elevated levels of Meg-CSF in extracts from AA urine. A single intraperitoneal injection of 0.5 AU of AA urinary protein induced a significant increase in spleen-derived megakaryocyte colony-forming cells (CFU-meg) 48 h past injection. In the group injected with ITP urinary extract, CFU-meg levels remained within normal limits. These results provide evidence that urinary extracts of ITP patients do not contain increased levels of Meg-CSF and a factor which directly stimulates in vivo CFU-meg production, and that the decrease in circulating platelet numbers that is characteristic of ITP patients is not a primary in vivo determinant in the elaboration of these factors.  相似文献   

6.
This paper describes a study of hematopoiesis in parathion-treated mice. Adult mice (48 C57B1/6) were given a daily dose of parathion (4 mg/kg p.o.) or corn oil vehicle (5 ml/kg p.o.) for 14 days. During the pesticide and the examination period, treated animals showed no signs of poisoning and had normal body weights. On days 2, 5, 7, 9, 12 and 14 following parathion or corn oil, femoral marrow cells were assayed in vitro for granulocyte/monocyte (CFU-gm), erythroid (CFU-e and BFU-e), megakaryocyte (CFU-meg), stromal (CFU-str) and multipotential (CFU-mix) hematopoietic stem cells. Leukocyte counts were elevated on days 2 and 5, while platelet counts were not increased until day 12. No change was observed in either hematocrits or numbers of marrow cells. BFU-e were reduced (23% of control) by day 7, then increased to 137% of control by day 14. CFU-e were reduced (41% of control) on day 9, then increased to 71% of control by day 14. CFU-mix were 130% of control (day 2), then declined to control values by day 5. On days 12 and 14, CFU-mix colonies decreased to 40% of control. CFU-str were reduced at all time points examined. CFU-gm were 123%, 136% and 130% of control on days 7, 12 and 14, respectively, while CFU-meg were increased (145% of control) on day 7. The data suggest that parathion alters the cloning potential of bone marrow precursor stem cells.  相似文献   

7.
Antiserum raised against a mouse mast cell line (FMP1) reacts with 90% to 100% of spleen colony-forming units (CFU-s), granulocyte/macrophage colony-forming cells (CFC-gm), erythroid burst-forming units (BFU-e), and 15% of nucleated marrow cells, using a complement-dependent cytotoxicity assay. We demonstrated that bone marrow, spleen, or thymus cells are able to absorb this activity from the antiserum. Although mouse brain cells have low reactivity with anti-FMP1 serum, the cytolysis level was reduced to background when antiserum was absorbed with brain cells. In addition, colony formation by marrow CFU-s, CFC-gm, and BFU-e was no longer prevented when the cells were incubated with brain-absorbed anti-FMP1 serum and complement. These findings suggest the presence of brain-associated antigens on CFU-s, CFC-gm, and BFU-e. To test whether a CFU-s accessory cell population in marrow is affected by treatment with anti-FMP1 serum and complement, antibody-treated marrow cells were mixed with large numbers of thymocytes and injected into recipient mice. Colony formation was not altered, indicating that the antiserum reacted directly with antigens on CFU-s and not on CFU-s accessory cells.  相似文献   

8.
The labeling of cystine residues with [1-14C]iodoacetic acid showed that urinary preparations from patients with aplastic anemia contained 3.06 X 10(-9) mol of sulfhydryl groups and 2.90 X 10(-7) mol of half-cystine as disulfide bonds in the native state, and 6.36 X 10(-7) mol in the denatured state per absorbance unit of protein, respectively. Sulfhydryl reagent-treated proteins retained full activity of megakaryocyte colony-stimulating factor (Meg-CSF) and erythropoietin (Epo), except with DTNB-treated protein. Reduction-carboxymethylation and reduction-mercuration resulted in complete loss of Meg-CSF and Epo activities, suggesting that one of the essential chemical groups of Meg-CSF and Epo is a disulfide bond. Reduction of disulfide bonds at neutral pH revealed that Meg-CSF is less susceptible to reduction than Epo. Reactivation occurred by spontaneous reoxidation in most of the reduced Meg-CSF (92.6%) and part of the reduced Epo (22.1%). These molecular behaviors may reflect differences in the spatial configurations of Meg-CSF and Epo.  相似文献   

9.
We examined the effects of recombinant human tumor necrosis factor (rhTNF) on normal human and murine granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-gm) and erythroid (CFU-e, BFU-e) progenitor cells. We suppressed in vitro colony formation by human marrow CFU-gm, CFU-e and BFU-e or peripheral blood BFU-e by adding rhTNF to the culture in a dose-related manner. A half-maximal inhibition was observed with 1-10 ng/ml. Leukemic cell line K562 cells were found to be sensitive to rhTNF in the clonogenic colony assay. However, the clonal growth of murine marrow CFU-e and BFU-e colonies was less than 50% inhibited and CFU-gm growth was unaffected even at a concentration of 1,000 ng/ml. We observed slight to moderate inhibition after 24 h pulse exposure of both human and murine-committed progenitors to rhTNF prior to the culture. Intravenous injection of 1 mg/kg of rhTNF caused a marked decrease in marrow erythroid progenitors and consequently caused anemia in the mice. Our data indicate that rhTNF has a suppressive effect on normal human and murine hemopoietic colony formation in vitro and murine erythropoiesis in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
Slj/+ mice display a slight macrocytic anaemia due to a defect in their haemopoietic organ stroma. They have a deficient endogenous spleen colony (CFU-end) formation following sublethal doses of gamma-radiation compared with their normal +/+ littermates, which is likely to be due to the low pre-irradiation CFU-S content of the Slj/+ spleen. CFU-S in these congenic mice do not differ in their sensitivity to gamma-irradiation or stem cell-activating factor. While injection of +/+ mice with 10 micrograms of lipopolysaccharide-W (LPS) one day prior to irradiation led to a substantial increase in their survival, the survival of Slj/+ mice was only slightly increased. Irradiation induced a similar dose-related reduction in the numbers of CFU-S in the spleen and femora of LPS-injected Slj/+ mice compared to similarly treated +/+ mice when measured directly after irradiation. At Day 9 after irradiation, injection of LPS led to a significantly higher CFU-end formation and higher numbers of CFU-S and nucleated cells in the Slj/+ spleens compared to LPS-injected +/+ mice. No such differences in the radioprotective effect of LPS were observed in the +/+ and Slj/+ mice with respect to the splenic and femoral 59Fe-incorporation and the femoral CFU-S numbers at Day 9. These data strongly suggest a contribution by immigrating CFU-S to the CFU-S numbers and endogenous colony formation in at least the Slj/+ spleen after LPS injection and subsequent sublethal irradiation. The observations also imply that the splenic organ stroma may play a mediatory role in the radioprotective action of LPS. In addition, the data represent an extreme example of a lack of correlation between animal survival and haemopoietic parameters. Caution should be taken when applying endogenous colony counts as a means of screening potential anti-radiation drugs.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of an autologous transplanted mammary tumor (RIII-T3) on hemopoiesis in RIII mice are described. Tumor-bearing animals died 30 to 40 days after inoculation and displayed splenomegaly, extreme neutrophilia, and moderately increased monocyte levels in the spleen, peripheral blood, and bone marrow. The precursors of neutrophils and monocytes, granulocyte/macrophage colony-forming cells (GM-CFC) were elevated in the spleen, bone marrow, and peripheral blood. RIII-T3-conditioned medium stimulated bone marrow GM-CFC and caused the myelomonocytic cell line, WEHI-3B, to differentiate in vitro. The conditioned medium did not stimulate erythroid, megakaryocyte, or eosinophil colony formation. When conditioned medium was fractionated, two peaks of activity corresponding to GM-CSF and G-CSF were observed, suggesting that the extreme neutrophilia observed in tumor-bearing animals may result from chronic exposure of the hemopoietic system to these hemopoietic hormones.  相似文献   

12.
The influence of sera from patients with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) was examined on colony formation from megakaryocyte (M) progenitors. Though incubation of marrow cells in Iscove's modified Dulbecco's medium (IMDM) containing 50% sera from several ITP patients stimulated M-colony formation in 8 of 13 cases, incubation in the sera from the patients and in baby rabbit serum as a source of complement significantly suppressed the colony formation. Experiments showed that sera of immunoglobulin G from ITP patients had significant complement-dependent cytotoxicity to M-progenitors in normal marrow cells or in the marrow cells from corresponding patients, but not to CFU-e, BFU-e or CFU-gm. Cytospin preparations of individually collected M-colonies from marrow cells treated with ITP patients' sera and complement revealed a reduction of megakaryocyte colonies containing cells of multilineages. These results indicate that autoantibodies detected in ITP patients can bind not only to platelets and megakaryocytes, but may also bind to M-progenitors.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract. Slj/+ mice display a slight macrocytic anaemia due to a defect in their haemopoietic organ stroma. They have a deficient endogenous spleen colony (CFU-end) formation following sublethal doses of gamma-radiation compared with their normal +/+ littermates, which is likely to be due to the low pre-irradiation CFU-S content of the Slj/+ spleen. CFU-S in these congenic mice do not differ in their sensitivity to gamma-irradiation or stem cell-activating factor. While injection of +/+ mice with 10 μg of lipopolysaccharide-W (LPS) one day prior to irradiation led to a substantial increase in their survival, the survival of Slj/+ mice was only slightly increased. Irradiation induced a similar dose-related reduction in the numbers of CFU-S in the spleen and femora of LPS-injected Slj/+ mice compared to similarly treated +/+ mice when measured directly after irradiation. At Day 9 after irradiation, injection of LPS led to a significantly higher CFU-end formation and higher numbers of CFU-S and nucleated cells in the Slj/+ spleens compared to LPS-injected +/+ mice. No such differences in the radioprotective effect of LPS were observed in the +/+ and Slj/+ mice with respect to the splenic and femoral 59Fe-incorporation and the femoral CFU-S numbers at Day 9. These data strongly suggest a contribution by immigrating CFU-S to the CFU-S numbers and endogenous colony formation in at least the Slj/+ spleen after LPS injection and subsequent sublethal irradiation. The observations also imply that the splenic organ stroma may play a mediatory role in the radioprotective action of LPS. In addition, the data represent an extreme example of a lack of correlation between animal survival and haemopoietic parameters. Caution should be taken when applying endogenous colony counts as a means of screening potential anti-radiation drugs.  相似文献   

14.
Preincubation of C57BL adult marrow cells or CBA fetal liver cells with a 250-fold excess concentration of purified GM-CSF failed to reduce the frequency of cells forming eosinophil, megakaryocyte or erythroid colonies in subsequent agar cultures. When excess concentrations of purified GM-CSF were added to agar cultures stimulated by pokeweed mitogen-stimulated spleen conditioned medium (SCM), no reduction was observed in the frequency of eosinophil, megakaryocyte or erythroid colonies. Addition of 4 units of purified erythropoietin (EPO) to cultures of fetal liver or adult marrow cells stimulated by SCM increased the number of erythroid colonies but did not reduce the number of non-erythroid colonies or the non-erythroid content of mixed erythroid colonies. Although neither GM-CSF nor EPO alone was able to stimulate erythroid colony formation in agar cultures of fetal liver cells, small numbers of large erythroid colonies were stimulated to develop in cultures containing both purified regulators. Purified GM-CSF was also able to support the survival in vitro of a small proportion of erythroid colony-forming cells in fetal liver populations cultured initially in the absence of SCM and the survival of some eosinophil and megakaryocyte colony-forming cells in similar cultures of adult marrow cells. The results do not support the hypothesis that GM-CSF and EPO compete for a common pool of uncommitted progenitor cells. On the contrary, the data indicate that GM-CSF und EPO are able to collaborate in stimulating the proliferation of some erythropoietic cells. Furthermore, purified GM-CSF appears to be able to support temporarily the survival and/or initial proliferation of at least some cells forming erythroid, eosinophil and megakaryocyte colonies, even though GM-CSF is unable to stimulate the formation of colonies of these types.  相似文献   

15.
Erythroid colony formation in agar cultures of CBA bone marrow cells was stimulated by the addition of pokeweed mitogen-stimulated spleen conditioned medium (SCM). Optimal colony numbers were obtained when cultures contained 20% fetal calf serum and concentrated spleen conditioned medium. By 7 days of incubation, large burst or unicentric erythroid colonies occurred at a maximum frequency of 40–50 per 105 bone marrow cells. In CBA mice the cells forming erythroid colonies were also present in the spleen, peripheral blood, and within individual spleen colonies. A marked strain variation was noted with CBA mice having the highest levels of erythroid colony-forming cells. In CBA mice erythroid colony-forming cells were mainly non-cycling (12.5% reduction in colony numbers after incubation with hydroxyurea or 3H-thymidine). Erythroid colony-forming cells sedimented with a peak of 4.5 mm/hr, compared with CFU-S, which sedimented at 4.25 mm/hr. The addition of erythropoietin (up to 4 units) to cultures containing SCM did not alter the number or degree of hemoglobinisation of erythroid colonies. Analysis of the total number of erythroid colony-forming cells and CFU-S in 90 individual spleen colonies gave a correlation coefficient of r = 0.93 for these two cell types. In addition to benzidine-positive erythroid cells, up to 40% of the colonies contained, in addition, varying proportions of neutrophils, macrophages, eosinophils, and megakaryocytes. Taken together with the close correlation between the numbers of CFU-S in different adult hemopoietic tissues, including individual spleen colonies, the data indicate that the erythroid colony-forming cells expressing multiple hemopoietic differentiation are members of the hemopoietic multipotential stem cell compartment.  相似文献   

16.
《Life sciences》1994,54(20):PL351-PL361
Use of the anti-viral drug zidovudine in the treatment of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has been associated with the development of hematopoietic toxicity. Several hematopoietic growth factors have been investigated in their ability to modulate such toxicity: however, no single factor has been demonstrated to produce restoration of hematopoiesis following use with zidovudine. We report results describing the effect of combination interleukin-1 (IL-1) and erythropoietin (Epo) in their ability to modulate the hematopoietic toxicity associated with dose-escalation zidovudine administered in normal mice. When administered over a six-week period, IL-1 and Epo raised the packed red cell volume, white blood cell and platelet counts in control mice and mice receiving dose-escalation zidovudine. These effects were attributed in part to the ability of combination IL-1 and Epo to increase erythroid, myeloid and megakaryocyte progenitor stem cells from bone marrow and spleen. These results indicate that use of combined IL-1 and Epo may be efficacious in ameliorating the hematopoietic toxicity associated with the use of zidovudine.  相似文献   

17.
Detmer K  Walker AN 《Cytokine》2002,17(1):36-42
We examined the effects of bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2), -3, -4, -5, -6, and -7 on the proliferation and differentiation of bone marrow CD34+ haematopoietic progenitors in semi-solid medium. The BMPs had no effect on haematopoietic colony development when added to medium containing erythropoietin (Epo) or Interleukin-3 plus Epo. Synergistic effects with the haematopoietic cytokines stem cell factor (SCF) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) were observed. In conjunction with GM-CSF and Epo, BMP-4 increased the number of both erythroid and granulocyte/monocyte colonies formed in semi-solid medium (P<0.01). No other BMP stimulated erythroid colony development under these conditions, while BMP-3, BMP-7 (P<0.01), BMP-5, and BMP-6 (P<0.05) stimulated granulocyte/monocyte colony formation. BMP-7 acted synergistically with stem cell factor to increase granulocyte/monocyte colony formation but not erythroid colony formation. The other BMPs did not affect either erythroid or granulocyte/monocyte colony development under these conditions. These results suggest that individual BMPs form part of the complement of cytokines regulating the development of haematopoietic progenitors, and in particular, point to a role for BMP-4 in the control of definitive, as well as embryonic erythropoiesis.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the effect of a recombinant human erythropoietin preparation (recombinant Epo) on murine megakaryocyte (MK) colony formation in serum-free and serum-containing culture systems, in order to study the relationship between Epo and megakaryopoiesis. Pokeweed mitogen spleen-conditioned medium (PWM-SCM), a standard source of MK colony stimulator, dose-dependently stimulated MK colony formation in the two culture systems. The plating efficiency of serum-free cultures was almost equal to that of cultures containing serum. Recombinant Epo also dose dependently stimulated MK colony formation in serum-containing cultures. However, in serum-free cultures recombinant Epo alone did not stimulate the growth of MK colonies; with the addition of fetal calf serum (FCS) to the serum-free cultures, recombinant Epo induced the growth of MK colonies. Furthermore, recombinant Epo enhanced MK colony formation through the stimulation of PWM-SCM or murine interleukin 3 (IL-3) in serum-free cultures. Our data show that Epo can act as a stimulator of megakaryopoiesis in collaboration with a factor in serum, or with an MK colony stimulator such as IL-3.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of recombinant human hemopoietic growth factors on early and late human erythroid progenitors (BFU-e and CFU-e) were investigated in serum-free cultures. Recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEpo) induced the formation of not only human CFU-e-derived colonies but also human BFU-e-derived bursts. Recombinant human interleukin 3 (rhIL-3) alone did not induce the formation of human BFU-e-derived bursts and human CFU-e-derived colonies. In the presence of rhEpo, rhIL-3 dose dependently increased the number of bursts stimulated by rhEpo, although rhIL-3 did not have the augmentative effect on human CFU-e growth. On the other hand, rhIL-3 did not stimulate the formation of murine BFU-e-derived bursts, and murine IL-3 did not stimulate the formation of human BFU-e-derived bursts. The results indicated that the burst-promoting activity of IL-3 was species-specific between human and murine cells. Recombinant human GM-CSF (rhGM-CSF) or recombinant human G-CSF (rhG-CSF) failed to induce human burst formation and did not augment the effect of rhEpo on human burst formation. The results of the present study suggest that in vitro, IL-3 can stimulate BFU-e in collaboration with Epo, but GM-CSF and G-CSF do not stimulate BFU-e growth in the presence or absence of Epo.  相似文献   

20.
Target cells for Friend virus-induced erythroid bursts in vitro   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
T A Kost  M J Koury  W D Hankins  S B Krantz 《Cell》1979,18(1):145-152
Erythropoietin (Epo) acts on mouse bone marrow cells in vitro in plasma clot or methyl cellulose culture systems to induce the formation of single erythroid colonies, or clusters of erythroid colonies termed bursts. Our laboratory has recently reported the observation that infection of mouse bone marrow cells in vitro with the polycythemia-inducing strain of Friend virus (FV) resulted in the formation of erythroid bursts after 5 days in plasma clot culture in the absence of added Epo. We have now used this system to characterize the target cells for this FV-induced erythroid transformation. The greatest number of FV bursts were observed when marrow cells were obtained from mice whose erythropoiesis had been stimulated by bleeding or phenylhydrazine treatment. Bleeding also resulted in an increase in the number of FV bursts following the infection of spleen cells in vitro. Hypertransfusion of mice, which results in decreased erythropoiesis, yielded a reduced number of FV bursts in vitro, as did prior treatment with actinomycin D. Cell separation studies using velocity sedimentation at unit gravity showed that the cells, which give rise to FV bursts, sedimented with a modal sedimentation velocity between 5.1–8.5 mm/hr. The Epo-dependent colony-forming unit erythroid (CFU-E), which gives rise to a single erythroid colony, also sediments with a modal velocity between 5.1–8.5 mm/hr, while the Epo-dependent day 8 burst-forming unit erythroid (day 8 BFU-E) sediments with a modal velocity between 3.0–6.0 mm/hr. A 20 min incubation of marrow cells with high specific activity 3H-thymidine, prior to virus infection, resulted in a 75–80% reduction in the number of FV bursts. Mixing cells from the upper portion of the gradient, which yielded no FV bursts, with cells from an area in which high numbers of FV bursts were observed did not result in the inhibition of burst formation. These experiments indicate that the primary target cells for FV bursts in vitro are most probably erythroid precursor cells that have matured beyond the day 8 BFU-E and are closely related to the CFU-E.  相似文献   

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