Effect of Human Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony Stimulating Factor (hGM-CSF) on Lymphoid and Myeloid Differentiation of Sorted Hematopoietic Stem Cells from hGM-CSF Receptor Gene Transgenic Mice
2000
: Bone marrow lineage-negative (Lin(-)) c-Kit(+) Sca-1(+) hematopoietic cells from human GM-CSF receptor gene transgenic mice were cultured on established bone marrow stromal cell (TBR59) layers and on semisolid medium. In the semisolid assay, an increasing number of larger colonies were observed in the presence of hGM-CSF. By coculture with the stromal cells, cobblestones containing myeloid and lymphoid lineages of cells were formed from the stem cell enriched fraction, and addition of hGM-CSF strongly stimulated formation of the cobblestones containing both lineages. Repeating passages of the cobblestones on TBR59 stromal cells in the presence of hGM-CSF gradually decreased cobblestone formation and inversely increased macrophages and granulocytes, while mast cells were generated when the cells derived from the semisolid assay were cultured in a liquid medium containing hGM-CSF. These results consistently suggest that cytokines such as GM-CSF may costimulate the immature hematopoietic cells at their stroma-dependent phase before lineage commitment, and after commitment that occurs by an intrinsic program of the cells, they may stimulate maintenance and maturation of progenitor cells.
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