Abstract
A murine monoclonal antibody (MoAb) designated FA6–152 has been obtained by immunizing mice with fetal erythrocytes. This antibody agglutinates fetal but not adult erythrocytes. Among blood cells, this antibody bound to both adult and fetal monocytes, platelets, and reticulocytes, but did not react with lymphocytes and granulocytes. Fluorescent labeling of marrow cells and of in vitro BFU-E, CFU-GM, and CFU-MK-derived colonies has shown that the antigen defined by FA6–152 MoAb was absent from the granulocytic precursors and was detected on the megakaryocytic lineage at a later stage of differentiation than the platelet-specific markers. In contrast, the antigen appeared as a very early marker of the erythroid differentiation since all erythroblasts, including proerythroblasts, were labeled even before the expression of glycophorin A. Cells from adult marrow and fetal liver were sorted with the FA6–152 MoAb and studied by electron microscopy and cell culture. The negative fraction contained granulocytic, monocytic, and megakaryocytic precursors, whereas the positive fraction was devoid of these precursors and contained monocytes, erythroblasts at all stages of maturation, and a homogeneous population of blasts. Cultures have shown that the only hematopoietic progenitors present in this positive fraction were CFU-E and some BFU-E. The antigenic density was related to the differentiation stage of the erythroid progenitors. In conclusion, this antibody is similar to the previously described 5F1 MoAb (Bernstein and Andrews, J Immunol 128:876, 1982; and Andrews et al, Blood 62:124, 1983) and provides a useful probe for studies leading to improved understanding of normal and malignant erythroid differentiation.