Abstract
Sera from dogs rendered aplastic by total-body irradiation stimulate human bone marrow megakaryocyte progenitors to form megakaryocyte colonies in plasma clot cultures. In this investigation, we evaluated the effects of varying concentrations of such sera on both the mitotic and endomitotic phases of human megakaryocyte development in vitro. When low concentrations of aplastic canine sera (2.5% to 5.0% [vol/vol]) were added to cultures of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells in place of normal AB serum, megakaryocyte colony formation was augmented fivefold, cell numbers per colony increased approximately 2.5- fold, and the geometric mean megakaryocyte ploidy almost doubled. Further increasing the aplastic canine serum concentration from 10% to 30% (vol/vol) stimulated no additional colony formation. However, there was a further augmentation of cell numbers per colony associated with a progressive decrease in the mean megakaryocyte ploidy. Megakaryocyte cultures were harvested after 7, 12, 15, and 19 days of incubation, and these demonstrated that the lower mean ploidy values found at the higher concentrations of aplastic canine serum did not result from delayed endoreduplication. At all aplastic serum concentrations evaluated, there existed a strong correlation between nuclear ploidy and cell diameter. We conclude that both the mitotic and endomitotic events in human megakaryocytopoiesis may be influenced by a factor or factors present in aplastic canine serum. At lower in vitro concentrations, such sera stimulate both mitosis and endomitosis, which promotes the development of megakaryocyte colonies composed of larger cells with a higher mean ploidy. With increasing aplastic serum concentrations, colony formation plateaus and mitosis is favored over endomitosis. This results in colonies composed of more numerous but smaller megakaryocytes with a lower mean ploidy. Our data suggest that the size and extent of polyploidization that can be achieved by a developing megakaryocyte may be influenced by the mitotic prior history of its immediate precursor cell.