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>Persistent production of colony‐stimulating factor (CSF‐1) by cloned bone marrow stromal cell line D2XRII after X‐irradiation
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Persistent production of colony‐stimulating factor (CSF‐1) by cloned bone marrow stromal cell line D2XRII after X‐irradiation
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机译:Persistent production of colony‐stimulating factor (CSF‐1) by cloned bone marrow stromal cell line D2XRII after X‐irradiation
AbstractThe adherent stromal layer in long‐term bone marrow cultures (LTBMC) provides the cellular environment necessary for the in vitro proliferation and differentiation of pluripotential hematopoietic stem cells. The role of humoral hematopoietic growth factors, colony‐stimulating factors (CSF) in the regulation of hematopoietic cell production in this system is poorly understood. We have recently isolated and cloned an adherent cell line, D2XRII, derived from murine LTBMC. Plateau phase 25 cm2cultures of 2 × 106D2XRII cells in 8.0 ml produced CSF‐1 (M‐CSF) at around 100–150 units/0.1 ml medium. Following X‐irradiation there was a dose‐dependent decrease in the production of CSF‐1 to a plateau of 50 of control levels at 10,000 rad. Higher doses did not produce a further decrease. The X‐ray dose reducing CSF‐1 production to 50 was 100‐fold above the lethal dose as measured by clonagenic survival following trypsinization and replating. Trypsinized replated viable adherent but nondividing X‐irradiated D2XRII cells were maintained for up to 8 weeks after irradiation and demonstrated continuous production of CSF‐1. The data indicate significant divergence of two biologic effects of X‐irradiation on plateau‐phase marrow stromal cells: physiologic function of adherence and CSF‐1 production, versus proliferative integrity. This divergence of effects may be very relevant to understanding the mechanism of X‐irradiation‐associated m
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