The Cellular Basis of the Genetically Determined Hemopoietic Defect in Anemic Mice of Genotype Sl/Sld

Author:

McCULLOCH E. A.12,SIMINOVITCH L.12,TILL J. E.12,RUSSELL E. S.13,BERNSTEIN S. E.13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, The Ontario Cancer Institute, Toronto, Canada; and The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Me.

2. Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto and the Ontario Cancer Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

3. The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Me.

Abstract

Abstract The proliferation and function of hemopoietic cells derived from genetically anemic Sl/Sld mice have been studied by the use of cell transplantation technics. It was found that marrow cells derived from anemic Sl/Sld or Sld/Sld mice, when implanted into heavily irradiated mice of genotype +sl/+sl, are capable of forming macroscopic spleen colonies, with approximately the same frequency as cells derived from normal +sl/+sl mice. Marrow cells derived from Sl/Sld animals were tested for their capacity to cure the anemia of W/Wr mice and were found to implant as rapidly and to have as long-lasting a beneficial effect as did marrow cells from +sl/+sl mice. The radiosensitivity of the colony-forming ability of marrow cells from Sl/Sld mice was found to be similar to that found previously for +sl/+sl marrow cells, although the anemic animals are known to be more sensitive to total-body irradiation than are their normal littermates. Marrow cells from +sl/+sl mice were found to proliferate more slowly in irradiated mice of genotype Sl/Sld than in irradiated +sl/+sl littermates, even when the anemic and the normal mice were joined in parabiosis. These observations indicate that the hemopoietic colony-forming cells in mice of genotype Sl/Sld are normal, but fail to function adequately because the tissues of mice of this genotype are unable to provide sufficient support for proliferation and differentiation of these progenitor cells.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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