Affiliation:
1. La Jolla Institute for Experimental Medicine (LJIEM), CA 92037, USA.
Abstract
Abstract
Knowledge of the stromal microenvironment is crucial for understanding the hematopoietic system. We took advantage of an assay that permits analysis of primary stroma-initiating cells (SICs) on the clonal level, and further characterized SICs and the factors that regulate SICs. Stroma formation in this assay is dependent on a high-molecular-weight factor secreted by the stromal cell line AC3.U. Here we show that this factor is identical to macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF), and that purified M-CSF is sufficient for induction of stroma formation. M-CSF, isolated from the line AC3.U, as well as from L929 cells and COS cells transfected with an expression vector encoding M-CSF, migrated in two peaks as 160- and 650-kD species after gel filtration. These molecular-weight species encompassed all stroma-inducing activity, and both stimulated macrophage colony formation. Affinity chromatography and blocking studies with antibodies specific for M-CSF and c-fms confirmed M-CSF as the sole factor in the supernatant of the stromal cell line AC3.U that promotes stroma formation. Culture of marrow, for as little as 1 week, depleted M-CSF-dependent SIC while increasing the incidence of replatable, factor-independent SIC. This suggests that culture changes the properties of SICs, perhaps by inducing differentiation into mature stromal cells. Thus, our results show a novel function of M-CSF as an important modulator of stroma formation.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
Cited by
21 articles.
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