Characterization of Bone Marrow and Lymph Node Repopulating Cells by Transplanting Mononuclear Cells into Radiated Dogs

1977 ◽  
pp. 29-38
Author(s):  
W. M. Ross ◽  
M. Körbling ◽  
W. Nothdurft ◽  
W. Calvo ◽  
T. M. Fliedner
1977 ◽  
pp. 29-38
Author(s):  
W. M. Ross ◽  
M. Körbling ◽  
W. Nothdurft ◽  
W. Calvo ◽  
T. M. Fliedner

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Dirk Henrich ◽  
René Verboket ◽  
Alexander Schaible ◽  
Kerstin Kontradowitz ◽  
Elsie Oppermann ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 934-936 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Mohanakumar ◽  
MA Baker ◽  
DA Roncari ◽  
RN Taub

Abstract We have raised a monkey antiserum that is selectively reactive with human leukemic myeloblasts by immunization with a glycoprotein antigen (AMLSGA) released from myeloblasts in short-term culture. Antimyeloblast activity can be demonstrated using complement-dependent cytotoxicity or indirect immunofluorescence. Selective antimyeloblast activity is retained following absorption with leukemic lymphoblasts or lymphocytes, nonleukemic lymphocytes, neutrophils, or mononuclear cells from nonleukemic bone marrow. Anti-AMLSGA antisera are not reactive with B-cell-enriched cell populations, and antaimyeloblast activity is not reduced by absorption with Ia-positive cells. Anti-AMLSGA is a useful reagent for identification of human leukemic myeloblasts.


Cytotherapy ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 458-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer J. Bara ◽  
Marietta Herrmann ◽  
Ursula Menzel ◽  
Lorin Benneker ◽  
Mauro Alini ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 1063-1069 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Lunardi-Iskandar ◽  
V Georgoulias ◽  
W Rozenbaum ◽  
D Klatzmann ◽  
MC Coll ◽  
...  

Abstract Patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) present impaired colony growth and in vitro differentiation capacity of peripheral blood and bone marrow T colony-forming cells (T-CFC). We show that peripheral blood, bone marrow, and lymph node T-CFC from patients with persistent lymphadenopathy syndrome (LAS), a syndrome that can precede AIDS, displayed similar abnormalities. Indeed, peripheral blood T-CFC generated a low number of colonies in seven out of 12 patients, and almost no colonies were obtained from bone marrow cells of all patients. The simultaneous study of T-CFC from peripheral blood and lymph node mononuclear cells seems to provide a reliable indicator for the risk of developing AIDS. The six patients who developed AIDS displayed extremely low numbers of peripheral blood T- CFC (13 +/- 17 colonies per 5 X 10(4) cells), and in two of them, no colonies could be obtained from lymph node T-CFC. The remaining patients who had not developed AIDS displayed a higher number of peripheral blood T-CFC (141 +/- 113 per 5 X 10(4) cells) and lymph node T-CFC, which, in addition, preserved their clonogenic capacity. In some patients, peripheral blood and lymph node, but not bone marrow, T-CFC were capable of generating colonies in the absence of added growth factors or mitogens, whereas in others, colony formation was obtained with purified interleukin 2 (IL 2) alone. Both spontaneous and IL 2- induced colony formation was abrogated by a monoclonal antibody against the IL 2 receptor. Taken together, these findings suggest that at least some T-CFC expressed IL 2 receptors. Colonies generated either in the presence or in the absence of added growth factors were composed of T4+, T6+, and T8+ cells, indicating impaired in vitro T-CFC differentiation. These findings indicate that a dramatic quantitative and qualitative impairment of the proliferation and differentiation of peripheral blood and lymph node T-CFC precedes the clinical evolution from LAS to AIDS.


2018 ◽  
Vol 370 (1) ◽  
pp. 116-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shukui Yu ◽  
Zhongxuan Li ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Zhengde Du ◽  
Ke Liu ◽  
...  

1971 ◽  
Vol 133 (6) ◽  
pp. 1242-1263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ole Werdelin ◽  
Robert T. McCluskey

The nature and specificity of the mononuclear cells in passively transferred autoimmune encephalomyelitis and adrenalitis were studied. The recipients were prepared by production of a small heat lesion in the target tissue 5 days before transfer. Within 24 hr after transfer of lymph node cells from donors sensitized with the corresponding tissue antigen, a dense mononuclear cell infiltrate developed around the lesion. When lymph node cells labeled in vitro with 3H-thymidine or 3H-adenosine were transferred, a significant number of labeled lymphocytes was found in the infiltrate at 24 or 48 hr. Lymphocytes labeled with 3H-thymidine showed a greater tendency to accumulate than cells labeled with 3H-adenosine, indicating that newly formed lymphocytes were more prone to enter the reaction than older cells. Labeled lymphocytes and macrophages of recipient origin and labeled lymphocytes from donors stimulated with B. pertussis were also shown to accumulate around the heat lesion provided the reaction had been initiated by transfer of unlabeled lymphocytes from donors sensitized to the appropriate tissue-specific antigen. In recipients which were given lymph node cells from two groups of donors, sensitized either to spinal cord or to adrenal antigens, with cells from only one group of donors labeled, equal percentages of labeled cells were found around each lesion. Thus, no evidence of preferential accumulation of specifically sensitized lymphocytes was obtained. In recipients which received whole body irradiation on the day of production of the heat lesions, 5 days before transfer of lymph node cells from appropriately sensitized donors, neither monocytes nor lymphocytes accumulated around the lesion. However, if the tibial bone marrow was shielded or if bone marrow cells were given to the recipients shortly after irradiation, inflammation developed as in normal recipients. In recipients which were irradiated 24 hr after the transfer of unlabeled lymph node cells from donors sensitized to the appropriate tissue antigen and then given labeled lymph node cells from B. pertussis-stimulated donors, labeled lymphocytes were found in the reaction 24 hr later. This accumulation occurred although virtually all the lymphocytes present in the lesion at 24 hr after the first transfer were destroyed by the irradiation. The results are interpreted as follows. The autoimmune reaction is initiated by the arrival at the site of a few specifically sensitized lymphocytes, probably on a random basis. After contact with antigen, factors are produced and released which cause the influx of monocytes and of lymphocytes, in particular newly formed ones, of various specificities. There is no preferential accumulation of specifically sensitized cells. The influx of lymphocytes appears to require the presence of monocytes or macrophages in the reaction.


1979 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 426-431 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Voet ◽  
K Hannig ◽  
K Zeiller

Small bone marrow lymphocytes, which had been previously enriched by velocity sedimentation, thymocytes, lymph node cells and spleen cells were electrophoretically separated, stained with fluorescein conjugated rabbit a-rat-Thy-1. globulin and their fluorescence intensities analyzed with a flow cytophotometer. Thy-1. antigens were found in 80% of the bone marrow small lymphocytes showing low electrophoretic mobility (EPM), in all thymocytes, about 80% of which show low and the rest medium to high EPM, and in a few lymph node cells of high EPM. Thy-1. positive cells were not observed in the spleen. All fluorescence intensity histograms obtained were modal and could be properly fitted with normal curves showing coefficients of variation (C.V.) in the range of 20% to 30%. It was observed that the thymocytes of low EPM had an antibody binding affinity significantly different from that of the other stained lymphocytes. Moreover the surface antigen density decreased in the sequence: thymocytes of low EPM, bone marrow lymphocytes of low EPM and thymocytes of high EPM. The fluorescence intensity of stained lymph node cells of high EPM appeared similar to that of thymocytes of high EPM but was not evaluated precisely. Thus the two dimensional cell analysis provided by a combination of EPM and surface fluorescence of Thy-1.+ cells, allows the characterization of different lymphocyte populations which cannot be clearly identified with normal one dimensional techniques. The biological significance of the results is discussed briefly.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 3793-3793
Author(s):  
Eric Padron ◽  
Jeffrey S Painter ◽  
Adam W Mailloux ◽  
Kathy L. McGraw ◽  
Jessica M. McDaniel ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3793 Introduction: Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia (CMML) is a genetically diverse hematologic malignancy characterized by cytopenias with or without leukocytosis, marrow dysplasia, monocytosis, splenomegaly, and a propensity to transform to Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). It is among the most aggressive chronic myeloid malignancies with a three year overall survival approximating twenty percent. The current treatment armamentarium is generally ineffective and mostly derived from studies that focused on Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS). As has been well defined in Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia (JMML), we previously reported that primary CMML bone marrow mononuclear cells exhibit GM-CSF-dependent pSTAT5 hypersensitivity. To determine whether this signaling pathway is a viable therapeutic target, we present the preclinical characterization of KB003 activity on primary CMML bone marrow mononuclear cells. Methods: KB003 was engineered and provided by KaloBios Pharmaceuticals. The ability of KB003 to neutralize GM-CSF was tested in two ways using doses that ranged from .01 to 10,000 ng/ml of KB003. First, 10 ng/ml of GM-CSF was used to induce IL-8 production by the U937 cell line as measured by ELISA. Second, the GM-CSF-dependent cell line, MO7e, was cultured in the absence and in the presence of 0.1, 1, and 10 ng/ml of GM-CSF with or without KB003. Apoptosis and viability was assessed by annexin and 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) staining by flow cytometry. To determine anti-GM-CSF sensitivity in CMML, primary cryoperserved bone marrow samples from 10 patients were reconstituted in prewarmed StemSpan H3000 with 10% FBS and microcultured in a 96 well plate with increasing doses of GM-CSF and KB003. After a 48-hour incubation period, cells were stained with myeloid-specific antibodies (CD34, CD38, CD14, CD33) and measured by multi-color flow cytometry. DAPI was used to measure cell viability. MethoCult hematopoietic progenitor assays were used to quantify the expansion and differentiation of CMML mononuclear cells in the presence of GM-CSF and escalating concentrations of KB003 in those samples with sufficient cell number for analysis (n=7). Results: KB003 effectively neutralized GM-CSF-induced IL-8 secretion in U937 cells with an IC50 of 48.2 ng/ml, as shown in Figure 1a. A dose of 0.1, 1, and 10 ng/ml of GM-CSF was used to protect MO7e cells from apoptosis and a survival benefit was achieved at each dose tested (Fig 1b). In this assay, KB003 neutralized 0.1 ng/ml of GM-CSF, but was unable to neutralize GM-CSF at higher doses (10 ng/ml). Using CMML samples, doses ranging from 10 to 100 μg/ml of KB003 were tested in apoptosis and in colony formation assays. Using the gating strategy shown in Figure 2a, the percentage of mature (CD33+/CD14+) and immature (CD33+/CD14-) myeloid subpopulations within the viable gate after KB003 treatment was decreased (Figure 2b). As expected, KB003 had no effect on CD3+ T-cells in the mixed culture populations. In addition to myeloid subpopulations identified by CD14, the CD33+/CD38+ cells were also more sensitive than CD33+/CD38- or CD38+/CD34+ inhibition by KB003 (Figure 2c, p<0.05). As shown in Figure 2d, hematopoetic colony formation assays confirmed the viability results. Using a one way ANOVA, there was a dose dependent decrease in the number of hematopoietic colonies, coupled with less organized and more diffuse appearance of colonies after KB003 treatment (Figure 2d). Conclusion: GM-CSF neutralization using KB003 suppresses CMML progenitor survival in vitro. These preclinical data suggest that KB003 and other GM-CSF signaling axis inhibitors merit further investigation in CMML. A more committed myeloid precursor expressing CD38 may represent the progenitor population with enhanced GM-CSF dependence in CMML. This is consistent with the results showing CD38 to be a marker of GM-CSF-dependent pSTAT5 sensitivity in JMML and may prove to be predictive biomarker for anti-GM-CSF therapy in CMML. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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