COMPARTMENTS AND CELL FLOWS WITHIN THE MOUSE HAEMOPOIETIC SYSTEM II. ESTIMATED RATES OF INTERCHANGE
- 1 May 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Cell Proliferation
- Vol. 8 (3) , 233-248
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2184.1975.tb01222.x
Abstract
Part‐body irradiated CBA mice were injected with CBA‐T6 bone marrow. In this way a predominantly donor population was established in the femora while the marrow of the humeri remained largely (average 94 %) of host origin. In animals examined cytologically up to 2 years later, no tendency was observed for the proportion of donor cells in the humeri to increase. Splenectomy had no effect on this. When femoral bone marrow from the experimental mice was injected into lethally (whole‐body) irradiated recipients, cells originating from the primary host repopulated the lymph nodes to a disproportionate extent. Equilibration between the cell populations of femora and humeri occurred after re‐exposure to 600 rad whole‐body irradiation, but not after 100 rad or 350 rad; thus, regeneration of damaged bone marrow involved a significant contribution from extrinsic stem cells only after the highest dose of radiation.The data are compatible with an inflow of at most ten effective stem cells per humerus per day from the blood, and suggest a much lower figure. This means that few if any of the stem cells of peripheral blood enter the bone marrow and found haemopoietic clones. Evidence is adduced for the existence of a proliferating lymphoid sub‐population in the bone marrow, contributing some 5–10% of the observed mitoses.The mitotic cells in the lymph nodes are replaced from marrow‐derived progenitors at an estimated rate of 4–5 %/day. The relevant data for the thymus are more variable, but suggest an average figure of 8–11 %/day. Earlier data from mouse parabionts suggest a lower rate of inflow to the thymus.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Persistent Lymphoid Cell Population in the ThymusNature New Biology, 1973
- The migration of lymphocytes from bone marrow to popliteal lymph nodes demonstrated by selective bone marrow labeling with3H-thymidine in vivoThe Anatomical Record, 1973
- Studies on T-Cell PrecursorsInternational Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 1973
- Migration of bone marrow lymphocytes demonstrated by selective bone marrow labeling with thymidine-H3The Anatomical Record, 1970
- Proliferative Activity of the Stem Cells in the Bone-marrow of Mice after Single and Multiple Irradiations (Total-or Partial-body Exposure)International Journal of Radiation Biology and Related Studies in Physics, Chemistry and Medicine, 1970
- COLONY-FORMING CELLS IN THE SPLEEN DETERMINATION OF THE FRACTION TRANSPLANTEDTransplantation, 1969
- THE INFLOW OF BONE MARROW CELLS TO THE THYMUS: STUDIES WITH PART‐BODY IRRADIATED MICE INJECTED WITH CHROMOSOME‐MARKED BONE MARROW AND SUBJECTED TO ANTIGENIC STIMULATIONAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1966
- Prevention of the Bone-marrow Syndrome in Irradiated Mice. A Comparison of the Results after Bone-marrow Shielding and Bone-marrow InoculationInternational Journal of Radiation Biology and Related Studies in Physics, Chemistry and Medicine, 1966
- In vivo Migration of Colony-forming Units from Shielded Bone Marrow in the Irradiated MouseNature, 1964
- Autologous and Isologous Bone Marrow Storage and Infusion in the Treatment of Myelo-SuppressionTransfusion, 1962