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Stimulation by normal and leukemic mouse sera of colony formation <i>in vitro</i> by mouse bone marrow cells
190
Citations
8
References
1967
Year
Health SciencesGranulocyteMedicineAgar Gel MethodStem Cell MobilizationHematologyImmunologyImmune RegulationColony Stimulating ActivityStem Cell ResearchBone Marrow CultureImmune SystemStem CellsCell BiologyMyelopoiesisLeukemic Mouse Sera
Abstract Using a modification of the agar gel method for bone marrow culture, serum from various strains of mice has been tested for colony stimulating activity. Ninety percent of sera from AKR mice with spontaneous or transplanted lymphoid leukemia and 40–50% of sera from normal or preleukemic AKR mice stimulated colony formation by C57B1 bone marrow cells. Sera from 6% of C3H and 30% of C57B1 mice stimulated similar colony formation. The incidence of sera with colony stimulating activity rose with increasing age. All colonies were initially mainly granulocytic in nature but later became pure populations of mononuclear cells. Bone marrow cells exhibited considerable variation in their responsiveness to stimulation by mouse serum. Increasing the serum dose increased the number and size of bone marrow cell colonies and with optimal serum doses, 1 in 1000 bone marrow cells formed a cell colony. Preincubation of cells with active serum did not stimulate colony formation by washed bone marrow cells. The active factor in serum was filterable, non‐dialysable and heat and ether labile.
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