Publication | Open Access
In vitro-derived leukemic erythroid cell lines induced by a raf- and myc-containing retrovirus differentiate in response to erythropoietin.
90
Citations
40
References
1988
Year
Hematological MalignancyVitro InfectionTerminal DifferentiationDevelopmental BiologyHematologyImmunologyPathologyBlood CellContinuous LinesAdult T-cell Leukemia-lymphomaMyc-containing Retrovirus DifferentiateMedicineCell BiologyMyelopoiesisMyeloid Neoplasia
In vitro infection of murine fetal liver cells with a retrovirus containing v-raf and v-myc oncogenes has produced continuous lines of immature erythroid cells that are leukemogenic. These cells synthesized a factor that stimulated their growth in vitro before autonomous variants emerged. Approximately 1000 high-affinity erythropoietin receptors could be detected per cell, and the hormone induced terminal differentiation in these cells. The lines were generated at an extremely low frequency (approximately 1 in 10(7) cells), suggesting that the combination of raf and myc is insufficient to develop erythroid cell lines and that additional events are necessary for transformation.
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