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Recombinant gibbon interleukin‐3 stimulates megakaryocyte colony growth in vitro from human peripheral blood progenitor cells

39

Citations

32

References

1988

Year

Abstract

Gibbon interleukin-3 (rIL-3) has recently been cloned and found to have a high degree of homology with the human IL-3 molecule. In this investigation, we evaluated the effects of gibbon rIL-3 on normal human peripheral blood megakaryocyte progenitor cell growth in vitro. Gibbon rIL-3 exhibited substantial megakaryocyte colony stimulatory activity (Meg-CSA), supporting peak colony numbers at a concentration of 1 U/ml. Megakaryocyte colony growth induced by rIL-3 reached 58% of the maximum achieved with the active, Meg-CSA-containing protein fraction of aplastic canine serum. Increasing gibbon rIL-3 concentrations also stimulated a 4-5-fold increase in megakaryocyte colony size and resulted in a decrease in geometric mean megakaryocyte ploidy. Ploidy values fell from 8.5N +/- 1.4 (+/- SEM) at an rIL-3 concentration of 0.1 U/ml to a minimum of 2.9N +/- 0.3 at 10 U/ml. In the presence of rIL-3 at 1.0 U/ml, megakaryocyte colony growth was linear with cell plating density and the regression line passed approximately through the origin. The effects of rIL-3 on megakaryocyte colony growth were independent of the presence of T-lymphocytes in the cultures. Cross-species evaluation of murine and gibbon IL-3 indicated that its bioactivity is species restricted. Murine IL-3 did not support colony growth from human megakaryocyte progenitors and gibbon rIL-3 showed no activity in stimulating acetylcholinesterase production by murine bone marrow cells. Gibbon rIL-3 is a potent stimulator of the early events of human megakaryocyte progenitor cell development promoting predominantly mitosis and early megakaryocytic differentiation.

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