Effect of a Neutrophiliaa-Inducing Tumor on Hemopoietic Stem Cells in Mice

1984 
The influence of neutrophilic stimulation on hemopoietic stem cells was studied in mice with tumor-induced neutrophilia. Transfusions of marrow cells from normal and neutrophilic tumor-bearing mice into lethally irradiated normal and tumor-bearing mice were performed. The number and the eryth-roid:granuloid (E:G) ratio of day 7 colonies in the recipient spleens and bones as well as the size of spleen colonies of recipient animals were determined. The E:G ratio of spleen and bone marrow colonies between normal and tumor-bearing mouse recipients and the number of spleen colonies did not differ significantly in either experiment. However, spleen colonies which developed in tumor-bearing irradiated mice were significantly larger than those which developed in normal recipients in both experiments. These studies indicated that while the line of differentiation taken by hemopoietic stem cells was not affected by the neutrophilic influence of the tumor, the tumor-bearing host environment appeared to enhance proliferation of transfused stem cells and/or their descendants. The stimulators of granulocytopoiesis in this model of neutrophilia appear to act on a population of progenitor cells more mature than the stem cells capable of forming 7-day colonies in the spleen and bone marrow of irradiated recipient mice.
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