THE REGULATION OF HEMATOPOIESIS IN LONG-TERM BONE-MARROW CULTURES .2. STIMULATION AND INHIBITION OF STEM-CELL PROLIFERATION
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 55 (6) , 931-936
Abstract
The isolation of a DNA synthesis inhibitor (NBME fraction IV) and stimulator (RBME fraction III) specific for the hemopoietic stem cell (CFU-s) from freshly isolated normal adult and regenerating murine bone marrow, respectively, has been well documented. Long-term liquid bone marrow cultures were used in a further analysis of the role of these factors in the regulation of CFU-s proliferation. Shortly after feeding, at a time when the cultured CFU-s are actively proliferating, high levels of the hemopoietic stem cell proliferation stimulator fraction III can be isolated from the culture medium. In contrast, the presence of essentially noncycling CFU-s found in cultures fed 8-10 days previously correlates with high levels of the homopoietic stem cell inhibitor fraction IV. A certain balance between these factors probably determines CFU-s proliferation in the long-term cultures. In support of this, DNA synthesis in actively cycling CFU-s in the long-term cultures is inhibited for at least 3 days by the addition of excess NBME fraction IV (inhibitor). Furthermore, DNA synthesis in noncycling cultured CFU-s is stimulated for at least 5 days by the addition of RBME fraction III (stimulator).This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Long-Term Production of Erythroid Precursor Cells (BFU) in Bone Marrow CulturesDifferentiation, 1977
- The Effect of Differing Demands for Blood Cell Production on DNA Synthesis by Hemopoietic Colony-Forming Cells of MiceBlood, 1965
- A Direct Measurement of the Radiation Sensitivity of Normal Mouse Bone Marrow CellsRadiation Research, 1961