NUMBERS AND DISPERSION OF REPOPULATING HEMATOPOIETIC-CELL CLONES IN RADIATION CHIMERAS AS FUNCTIONS OF INJECTED CELL DOSE

  • 1 March 1987
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 15  (3) , 251-257
Abstract
Lethally irradiated mice were repopulated with low (105), medium (106) or high (107) doses of congenic bone marrow cells. Marrow donors were heterozygous for the X-chromosome-encoded allozyme marker phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK-1). A second allozyme marker, phosphoglucose isomerase (GPI-1), distinguished between donor and radioresistant host cells. Use of these markers allowed the numbers and dispersion of repopulating hematopoietic clones to be estimated by binomial statistics. The number of major repopulating clones was related to the injected cell dose in a linear fashion, the inferred frequency of clonogenic cells in donor bone marrow being about 1:40,000. In high-dose recipients, the clones grew locally, with little or no dispersion between bones. Low-dose recipients, in contrast, carried widely dispersed clones; these tended to become reduced in number with increasing time after repopulation. Most of the (few) bone marrow clones present in low-dose recipients were also present in the thymus. In contrast, only about 10% of bone marrow clones in high-dose recipients were substantially represented in the thymus at any one time-about 16 clones in each lobe.