DETECTION OF PRIMITIVE MACROPHAGE PROGENITOR CELLS IN MOUSE BONE-MARROW
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 54 (6) , 1446-1450
Abstract
A previously undetected population of macrophage progenitor cells with high proliferative potential (HPP-CFC, an average of 5 .times. 104 cells/colony) in nutrient agar cultures was demonstrated in post-fluoraouracil (FU) and fluorouracil plus endotoxin (FUEt) treated and normal mouse bone marrow, using a combination of colony-stimulating factors, pregnant uterus extract (PMUE) plus human spleen-conditioned medium (HUSPCM). Neither PMUE nor HUSPCM alone stimulated colony formation by the HPP-CFC. Incidences of HPP-CFC were 1 in 2380 nucleated cells in normal marrow, 1 in 380 for 10-day post-FU, and 1 in 118 in 8-day post-FUEt marrow cells. HPP-CFC were only depleted to 57% of normal at 2 days after FU treatment, whereas cells responsive to PMUE alone (low proliferative potential, LPP-CFC) were depleted to 1.2%, indicating a marked difference in cycling status of the respective types of progenitor cells.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- CHARACTERIZATION OF A PRIMITIVE ERYTHROPOIETIC PROGENITOR FOUND IN MOUSE MARROW BEFORE AND AFTER SEVERAL WEEKS IN CULTURE1979
- The effect of oxygen tension on haemopoietic and fibroblast cell proliferation in vitroJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1978
- STIMULATION BY HUMAN PLACENTAL CONDITIONED MEDIUM OF HEMATOPOIETIC COLONY FORMATION BY HUMAN MARROW CELLS1977