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Relationships between B cell and myeloid differentiation. Studies with a B lymphocyte progenitor line, HAFTL-1
A cell line, HAFTL-1, derived by in vitro transformation of fetal liver cells with v-Ha-ras, was found to have molecular and phenotypic characteristics of pro-B cells recently committed to the Ly-1+ B cell differentiation pathway. Stimulation of these cells with LPS resulted in their differentiation...
Formato: | Texto |
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Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Rockefeller University Press
1988
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2188967/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3294335 |
Sumario: | A cell line, HAFTL-1, derived by in vitro transformation of fetal liver cells with v-Ha-ras, was found to have molecular and phenotypic characteristics of pro-B cells recently committed to the Ly-1+ B cell differentiation pathway. Stimulation of these cells with LPS resulted in their differentiation within either the B or myelomonocytic lineages. Thus, lines derived from LPS-stimulated HAFTL-1 cells were shown to be clonally related, as evidenced by common v-ras integrations, but to exhibit characteristics of pre-B cells (ThB expression, continuing DJ heavy chain rearrangements) or mature macrophages (expression of Mac-1 and Mac-2, lysozyme and nonspecific esterase production, phagocytosis) while maintaining their Ly-1+ phenotype. These results suggest that events resulting in the irrevocable commitment to a single lineage occur late in differentiation, at least within the pathway yielding Ly-1+ B cells and a proposed subpopulation of Ly-1+ monocytes and macrophages. Final commitment to these lineages is carefully orchestrated, as evidenced by restricted expression of Ly-5 isoforms and production of IgH transcripts. |
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