Abelson virus potentiates long-term growth of mature B lymphocytes

1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 183-194
Author(s):  
L A Serunian ◽  
N Rosenberg

Abelson murine leukemia virus (A-MuLV) infection of mouse bone marrow cells usually leads to transformation of pre-B cells. However, when the environment is modified by the continuous presence of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), two novel types of membrane immunoglobulin (mIg)-positive B cell lines are generated. Because the cells which give rise to these cell lines copurify with mIg-positive bone marrow cells, the cell lines arise as a result of A-MuLV interaction with a new type of in vitro target cell. The cell lines generated fall into two groups which differ in several phenotypic characteristics. Group 1 cells are more differentiated than the typical pre-B cell transformant in that they synthesize mIgM and appear to resemble virgin B cells. The group 1 cells do not secrete immunoglobulin and are independent of LPS for growth. In addition, these cell lines synthesize the Abelson P160 protein, contain integrated abl proviral DNA, and are highly tumorigenic in syngeneic animals. The group 2 cell lines differ markedly from both the group 1 cells and from typical, pre-B cell A-MuLV transformants. These cells are mIgG positive and secrete large amounts of immunoglobulin into the culture medium. The cell lines are comprised of both adherent and nonadherent cells and do not synthesize P160 or contain integrated v-abl sequences. The group 2 cells are nontumorigenic in syngeneic animals and require LPS for growth and viability. Both types of cells have remained in culture for over 2 years with no changes in their phenotypic characteristics. This A-MuLV infection system and the novel mIg-positive cell lines may serve as useful models for studying biochemical and molecular properties of mature B cells.

1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 183-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
L A Serunian ◽  
N Rosenberg

Abelson murine leukemia virus (A-MuLV) infection of mouse bone marrow cells usually leads to transformation of pre-B cells. However, when the environment is modified by the continuous presence of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), two novel types of membrane immunoglobulin (mIg)-positive B cell lines are generated. Because the cells which give rise to these cell lines copurify with mIg-positive bone marrow cells, the cell lines arise as a result of A-MuLV interaction with a new type of in vitro target cell. The cell lines generated fall into two groups which differ in several phenotypic characteristics. Group 1 cells are more differentiated than the typical pre-B cell transformant in that they synthesize mIgM and appear to resemble virgin B cells. The group 1 cells do not secrete immunoglobulin and are independent of LPS for growth. In addition, these cell lines synthesize the Abelson P160 protein, contain integrated abl proviral DNA, and are highly tumorigenic in syngeneic animals. The group 2 cell lines differ markedly from both the group 1 cells and from typical, pre-B cell A-MuLV transformants. These cells are mIgG positive and secrete large amounts of immunoglobulin into the culture medium. The cell lines are comprised of both adherent and nonadherent cells and do not synthesize P160 or contain integrated v-abl sequences. The group 2 cells are nontumorigenic in syngeneic animals and require LPS for growth and viability. Both types of cells have remained in culture for over 2 years with no changes in their phenotypic characteristics. This A-MuLV infection system and the novel mIg-positive cell lines may serve as useful models for studying biochemical and molecular properties of mature B cells.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 3562-3568
Author(s):  
M Principato ◽  
J L Cleveland ◽  
U R Rapp ◽  
K L Holmes ◽  
J H Pierce ◽  
...  

Murine bone marrow cells infected with replication-defective retroviruses containing v-raf alone or v-myc alone yielded transformed pre-B cell lines, while a retroviral construct containing both v-raf and v-myc oncogenes produced clonally related populations of mature B cells and mature macrophages. The genealogy of these transformants demonstrates that mature myeloid cells were derived from cells with apparent B-lineage commitment and functional immunoglobulin rearrangements. This system should facilitate studies of developmental relationships in hematopoietic differentiation and analysis of lineage determination.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 3562-3568 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Principato ◽  
J L Cleveland ◽  
U R Rapp ◽  
K L Holmes ◽  
J H Pierce ◽  
...  

Murine bone marrow cells infected with replication-defective retroviruses containing v-raf alone or v-myc alone yielded transformed pre-B cell lines, while a retroviral construct containing both v-raf and v-myc oncogenes produced clonally related populations of mature B cells and mature macrophages. The genealogy of these transformants demonstrates that mature myeloid cells were derived from cells with apparent B-lineage commitment and functional immunoglobulin rearrangements. This system should facilitate studies of developmental relationships in hematopoietic differentiation and analysis of lineage determination.


Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 76 (8) ◽  
pp. 1586-1592 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Shibata ◽  
PG McCaffrey ◽  
H Sato ◽  
Y Oghiso

Abstract Eicosanoid release during multilineage hematopoiesis was assessed using freshly isolated mouse bone marrow cells cultured in the presence of interleukin-3 (IL-3) (10% WEHI-3 culture-conditioned medium). Cells that could release prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) when stimulated with calcium ionophore A23187, but not with phorbol ester (PMA), appeared within 4 days. The cells harvested on day 10 released 42 ng of PGE2/10(6) cells/mL after A23187 stimulation. Leukotriene B4 (LTB4) (4 ng/mL) was also detected after A23187 stimulation, but there was no detectable LTC4 (less than 0.5 ng/mL). Nonadherent bone marrow cells were isolated from 28-day cultures and cloned. All clones were strongly IL-3- dependent. Although other growth factors such as granulocyte colony- stimulating factor (G-CSF), granulocyte-macrophage CSF (GM-CSF), and CSF-1 failed to promote survival or support proliferation of the cells, three clones (11–1-A6, 3–2-D5, and 11–1-A1) showed significant increases in 3H-thymidine incorporation, respectively, after PMA treatment for 24 hours. Surviving cells displayed dominantly myeloid type morphology and phenotypic characteristics. The data suggest that IL-3 is important in the formation of PGE2-producing cells. In contrast to many macrophages (MO), neither the IL-3-dependent cell lines nor the IL-3-cultured bone marrow cells released significant amounts of PGE2 when stimulated with PMA or IL-3, although PMA and IL-3 both induced translocation of protein kinase C (PKC) to the membrane fraction. The lack of production of PGE2 and other eicosanoids by the PMA- and IL-3- stimulated cell lines was confirmed by measuring the release of 3H- arachidonic acid. The data suggest that in IL-3-dependent bone marrow cell lines the activation of eicosanoid metabolism requires elevated cellular Ca2+; PKC activation alone does not appear to be a sufficient stimulus.


1983 ◽  
Vol 158 (2) ◽  
pp. 616-622 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Hansson ◽  
K Falk ◽  
I Ernberg

In vitro infection of human B lymphocytes with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) results in establishment of B lymphoblastoid cell lines that reflect normal B cell phenotypes. In this study we have investigated whether immature B cells from fetal bone marrow and liver can serve as targets for EBV. The fetal bone marrow cells were readily transformed by EBV. Among the resulting cell lines, five were surface Ig (sIg)-negative. Three B cell-associated antigens defined by monoclonal antibodies were expressed to the same extent on the fetal cell lines, whether they belonged to the sIg- or sIg+ group. The various differentiation stages that these cell lines may represent are discussed.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1569-1569
Author(s):  
Kilannin Krysiak ◽  
Justin Tibbitts ◽  
Matthew J. Walter

Abstract Myeloid and erythroid differentiation defects and cytopenias are most commonly described in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), however, a reduction in B-cell progenitors exists. The genetic events contributing to this reduction are poorly understood. Interstitial deletion or loss of one copy of the long arm of chromosome 5 (del5q) is the most common cytogenetic abnormality associated with MDS. Two commonly deleted regions on del(5q) have been described and no biallelic mutations have been identified implicating haploinsufficiency of genes on this interval as a driving mechanism. We, and others, have identified several del(5q) candidate genes, including RPS14, EGR1, CTNNA1, APC, NPM1, DIAPH1, miR145, miR146a, and HSPA9. Consistent with haploinsufficiency, HSPA9 mRNA levels are 50% reduced in del(5q) patients. We previously showed that knockdown of Hspa9by shRNA in a murine bone marrow transplant model resulted in a significant reduction in murine B-cells in the bone marrow, spleen and peripheral blood. To further characterize the role of Hspa9 in hematopoiesis, we created Hspa9 heterozygous mice (Hspa9+/-). Heterozygotes express 50% less Hspa9 protein and are born at normal Mendelian frequencies (N>100). No significant differences in mature lineage markers, complete blood counts, and hematopoietic organ cellularity, have been identified up to 12 months of age. However, as early as 2 months of age, Hspa9+/- mice show a significant reduction in CFU-PreB colonies compared to their wild-type littermates, indicating B-cell progenitor defects (14 vs. 48 colonies/100,000 bone marrow cells plated, respectively, N=10 mice/genotype, p<0.001). Following long-term engraftment of transplanted bone marrow cells from Hspa9+/-or littermate controls into lethally irradiated recipients, we also observed a 5.8-fold reduction in bone marrow CFU-PreB colonies (N=7-9 mice/genotype, p=0.002), confirming the B-cell progenitor defect is hematopoietic cell-intrinsic. Despite the reduction in CFU-PreB colony numbers, frequencies of freshly isolated early B-cell progenitor and precursor populations in the bone marrow and spleen of Hspa9+/- mice are not different than wild-type littermate controls when assessed by flow cytometry (common lymphoid progenitor, Hardy fractions A-F). We hypothesized that these mice were able to compensate for B-cell alterations caused by loss of Hspa9 in vivo. Consistent with our hypothesis, the reduction in CFU-PreB colony numbers was partially rescued by increasing the concentration of IL-7 in the media. Hspa9+/- colony numbers increased 1.8 fold when the IL-7 concentration was increased from 10ng/mL to 50ng/mL compared to 0.80 fold for wild-type littermates (p=0.03, N=6 mice/genotype). This effect was unique to IL-7. Adding increasing concentrations of Flt-3 ligand, another cytokine that contributes to early B-cell development, did not alter CFU-PreB colony formation. We isolated B220+ cells from Day 7 CFU-PreB cultures for gene expression array analysis and observe reduced expression of genes promoting B-cell proliferation and activation in Hspa9+/- compared to Hspa9+/+ cells. Since IL-7 is the only supportive cytokine in the methylcellulose media, can partially rescue the reduced CFU-PreB phenotype, and is required for early B-cell development and survival, we hypothesized that Hspa9 haploinsufficiency inhibits transduction of IL-7 signaling. We tested this hypothesis using an IL-7 dependent mouse B-cell line (B7 cells; Ba/F3 cells that stably express the IL-7 receptor). Knockdown of Hspa9 by siRNAs resulted in a 8-fold reduction in cell number after 4 days in culture (p=0.004, confirmed with two independent siRNAs) and was associated with an increase in apoptosis and reduction in cells in S-phase of the cell cycle. Knockdown of Hspa9 in B7 cells resulted in reduced levels of phosphorylated Stat5, an immediate downstream target of IL-7 receptor stimulation, compared to cells treated with a non-targeting siRNA (measured at 5, 10, 15 and 30 minutes following 10ng/mL IL-7 stimulation, p≤0.03). Ongoing studies will further interrogate the effects of Hsap9 knockdown on Jak-Stat signaling. Collectively, these data implicate that loss of HSPA9 alters IL-7 signaling, potentially contributing to the reduction of B-cell progenitors observed in patients with del(5q)-associated MDS. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1987 ◽  
Vol 165 (2) ◽  
pp. 444-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y H Park ◽  
D G Osmond

Bone marrow cells were examined by double immunofluorescent labeling techniques to detect determinants for the B lineage monoclonal antibody, 14.8, the nuclear enzyme, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT), cytoplasmic mu chains (c mu), and surface mu (s mu). In 8-9-wk-old C3H/HeJ mice, 14.8+ cells totalled 22.2% of all marrow cells (35 X 10(5) cells/femur). While many 14.8+ cells were c mu+ s mu- pre-B cells and s mu+ B lymphocytes (17.0%), the remainder (5.2%) were large cells lacking mu chains. After injecting vincristine sulfate, these 14.8+ mu- cells accumulated in mitosis at a rate of 13.5%/h (turnover time, 7.4 h). Their calculated total production rate (41 X 10(6) cells/whole marrow/d) exceeded that previously determined for large pre-B cells, suggesting some cell loss from the B lineage. TdT+ cells made up 1.8% of marrow cells and were mainly medium-sized cells. They all lacked mu chains, but half (0.9%) bound 14.8 antibody at low to medium intensity. Three discrete cell populations were thus defined, differing in mean cell diameter TdT+ 14.8- mu-, 9.5 micron; TdT+ 14.8+ mu-, 10 microns; and TdT- 14.8+ mu-, 11.5 micron, presumptively representing a sequence of cell stages preceding the expression of mu chains in large pre-B cells (TdT- 14.8+ c mu+ s mu-, 11.5 microns). This work provides a tentative model of early progenitor cells and their proliferation in normal marrow as a basis for studies of perturbations and the control of B lymphocytopoiesis.


1977 ◽  
Vol 145 (5) ◽  
pp. 1382-1386 ◽  
Author(s):  
E S Metcalf ◽  
N H Sigal ◽  
N R Klinman

The susceptibility to in vitro tolerance induction has been implicated as a characteristic of B cells early in their development, since DNP-reactive B cells are tolerizable only during the first days after birth, and 25% of adult bone marrow cells are tolerizable. In the present study, a modification of the in vitro splenic focus technique was utilized to determine if PC-specific B cells, by virtue of their late expression (approximately 1 wk post-parturition), also display susceptibility to tolerance induction. The results demonstrate that at 7-10 days after birth, when over 90% of the DNP-specific splenic B cells are resistant to tolerance induction, the majority of PC-specific B cells are tolerizable. These results re-emphasize tolerance susceptibility as a characteristic of developing clones, confirm the late acquisition of PC-specific B cells, and support the contention that the acquisition of the specificity repertoire is a highly ordered, specifically predetermined process which is independent of antigen-driven events.


Stroke ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 32 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 379-380
Author(s):  
Yi Li ◽  
Jieli Chen ◽  
Michael Chopp

P222 Most bone marrow cells (BMCs) transplanted into the ischemic brain of adult rodents die shortly after they are grafted, similar to the 90%-95% of the fetal cells that die after transplantation into Parkinson s patients. We tested whether coadministration of BMCs and Z-Val-Ala-DL-Asp-fluoromethylketone (Z-VAD), an inhibitor of apoptosis, into the ischemic boundary zone of the striatum and the cortex in rat brain promotes BMC survival. Adult Wistar rats were subjected to transient (2 h) middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAo). At 1 d after ischemia, saline (n=9, Group 1); BMCs (1x10 6 in 10 :l, n=8, Group 2); or BMCs with Z-VAD (50 nM/ml, n=4, Group 3) were injected into brain. BMCs were harvested from donor adult rats injected with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU, as a tracer). Rats were subjected to rotarod-motor and adhesive-removal somatosensory functional tests before MCAo and at 1 and 7 d after MCAo. Rats in Group 3 exhibited significant improvement (10.3±2.6 seconds, p<0.05) on the adhesive-removal test at 7 d, compared with those in Group 1 (29.3±9.4 seconds) and Group 2 (21.3±5.5 seconds), respectively. Immunohistochemistry staining was employed to identify BrdU-BMCs, and TUNEL staining was used to identify in situ DNA fragmentation of apoptotic cells. Even though the infarct volume in Group 3 (29.9±9.2%) did not change significantly, compared with Group 1 (34.3±4.0%) and Group 2 (26.6±3.8%); the number of BrdU-BMCs (88,200±7,400, ∼8.8% of 10 6 transplanted cells) increased significantly (p<0.05) in rats in Group 3, compared with that in Group 2 (31,700±9,100, ∼3.2% of 10 6 cells) at 7 d. In the grafting areas, apoptotic cells were less clustered (<90 vs.>240 per region) and apoptotic cells were significantly decreased (12.3±1.7/mm 2 vs. 25.9±2.1/mm 2 , ∼47%, p<0.05). Our data suggest that intracerebral coadministration of bone marrow cells and inhibitors of apoptosis enhance cellular survival of bone marrow cells and improves neurological functional recovery after cerebral ischemia.


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