Human erythroid burst-forming unit: T-cell requirement for proliferation in vitro.

DG Nathan, L Chess, DG Hillman, B Clarke… - The Journal of …, 1978 - rupress.org
DG Nathan, L Chess, DG Hillman, B Clarke, J Breard, E Merler, DE Housman
The Journal of experimental medicine, 1978rupress.org
Human mononuclear leukocytes were fractionated into populations of null, T and B cells by
immunoabsorbent column chromatography followed by E-rosette formation and purification
of T cells by differential centrifugation and osmotic lysis. The unfractionated and fractionated
cell populations were first separately cultured for 14 days in plasma clots in the presence of
two international units erythropoietin. Typical erythroid burst-forming unit (BFU-E)-derived
colonies grew in the unfractionated cell cultures but not from T-or B-cell cultures. BFU-E …
Human mononuclear leukocytes were fractionated into populations of null, T and B cells by immunoabsorbent column chromatography followed by E-rosette formation and purification of T cells by differential centrifugation and osmotic lysis. The unfractionated and fractionated cell populations were first separately cultured for 14 days in plasma clots in the presence of two international units erythropoietin. Typical erythroid burst-forming unit (BFU-E)-derived colonies grew in the unfractionated cell cultures but not from T- or B-cell cultures. BFU-E colonies grew in null cell cultures but most of the colonies were small and variably hemoglobinized with less than three subcolonies. When intact T cells were added to null cells and cocultured, many typical large BFU-E colonies with more than 10 well homogenized subcolonies appeared. Increasing numbers of large BFU-E colonies in null cell cultures were induced by stepwise addition of T cells but not by the addition of B cells. A conditioned medium in which T cells had been induced to divide by tetanus toxoid substituted for intact T cells in this T-cell-dependent BFU-E colony formation observed in null cells. These findings demonstrate that the BFU-E, a committeded erythroid stem cell, resides in the null cell fraction of peripheral blood, but its proliferative capacity and differentiation in vitro requires a soluble product of T cells. Such experiments now permit a new approach to the assessment of various disorders of erythropoiesis. Erythroid hypoplasia in a particular case may be due to dysfunction of the committed precursor cell or to a failure of a helper effect induced by T cells.
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