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Serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. Implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging

The mouse hematopoietic system was subjected to repeated depletion and regeneration either by serial transfer of bone marrow cells through lethally irradiated recipients or by repeated treatment with the cycle-active drug hydroxyurea (HU). The capacity of surviving stem cells to proliferate and self...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ross, EAM, Anderson, N, Micklem, HS
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1982
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2186603/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7035599
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author Ross, EAM
Anderson, N
Micklem, HS
author_facet Ross, EAM
Anderson, N
Micklem, HS
author_sort Ross, EAM
collection PubMed
description The mouse hematopoietic system was subjected to repeated depletion and regeneration either by serial transfer of bone marrow cells through lethally irradiated recipients or by repeated treatment with the cycle-active drug hydroxyurea (HU). The capacity of surviving stem cells to proliferate and self-renew was assayed at intervals by two methods: (a) the spleen colony method; and (b) competitive repopulation of irradiated recipients using chromosome markers, with normal bone marrow cells as an internal control. The progressive decline in stem cell function that occurred during serial transfer of bone marrow and that had already begun after a single transfer was not seen during HU treatment; up to 25 pairs of HU injections given over more than 1 yr had no discernible effect on the number of stem cells present 3 wk after the final injection or on their capacity to self-renew. Within 2 d after exposure to HU, the average self-renewal capacity of surviving stem cells was enhanced. This implies that the drug selectively eliminates poorly self-renewing stem cells and hence that these enter cycle more readily than stem cells with a high self-replicative potential. However, the fact of being in cycle at the time of injection did not of itself affect self-renewal. The results show that serial transfer of bone marrow is not a valid method for studying clonal aging phenomena because it does not fulfill the assumptions on which such studies are based. No evidence was obtained for any intrinsic limitation in the capacity of bone marrow populations for repeated regeneration after HU-induced depletion. However, this does not necessarily imply that individual hematopoietic clones are capable of indefinite expansion because hematopoiesis may (as suggested by the relative resistance of highly self-replicative stem cells to mitogenic signals) proceed on the basis of clonal succession.
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spelling pubmed-21866032008-04-17 Serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. Implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging Ross, EAM Anderson, N Micklem, HS J Exp Med Articles The mouse hematopoietic system was subjected to repeated depletion and regeneration either by serial transfer of bone marrow cells through lethally irradiated recipients or by repeated treatment with the cycle-active drug hydroxyurea (HU). The capacity of surviving stem cells to proliferate and self-renew was assayed at intervals by two methods: (a) the spleen colony method; and (b) competitive repopulation of irradiated recipients using chromosome markers, with normal bone marrow cells as an internal control. The progressive decline in stem cell function that occurred during serial transfer of bone marrow and that had already begun after a single transfer was not seen during HU treatment; up to 25 pairs of HU injections given over more than 1 yr had no discernible effect on the number of stem cells present 3 wk after the final injection or on their capacity to self-renew. Within 2 d after exposure to HU, the average self-renewal capacity of surviving stem cells was enhanced. This implies that the drug selectively eliminates poorly self-renewing stem cells and hence that these enter cycle more readily than stem cells with a high self-replicative potential. However, the fact of being in cycle at the time of injection did not of itself affect self-renewal. The results show that serial transfer of bone marrow is not a valid method for studying clonal aging phenomena because it does not fulfill the assumptions on which such studies are based. No evidence was obtained for any intrinsic limitation in the capacity of bone marrow populations for repeated regeneration after HU-induced depletion. However, this does not necessarily imply that individual hematopoietic clones are capable of indefinite expansion because hematopoiesis may (as suggested by the relative resistance of highly self-replicative stem cells to mitogenic signals) proceed on the basis of clonal succession. The Rockefeller University Press 1982-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2186603/ /pubmed/7035599 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Ross, EAM
Anderson, N
Micklem, HS
Serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. Implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging
title Serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. Implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging
title_full Serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. Implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging
title_fullStr Serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. Implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging
title_full_unstemmed Serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. Implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging
title_short Serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. Implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging
title_sort serial depletion and regeneration of the murine hematopoietic system. implications for hematopoietic organization and the study of cellular aging
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2186603/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7035599
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