Abstract
The tetrapeptide Acetyl-N-Ser-Asp-Lys-Pro (AcSDKP, Seraspenide; Ipsen- Biotech, Paris, France), an inhibitor of murine spleen colony-forming units reduces the number and the percentage in DNA synthesis of progenitors from human unfractionated bone marrow. To determine whether AcSDKP may directly affect the growth potential of purified progenitors even at the most primitive level, CD34+HLA-DRhigh and CD34++HLA-DRlow cells were highly purified by cell sorting. Then, CD34+ subsets were stimulated in liquid culture with combinations of growth factors (GFs) and AcSDKP was added for 20 hours or 6 days and cells plated in methylcellulose. After a 20-hour incubation, we show that AcSDKP (at 10(-10) mol/L) significantly inhibits the colony formation of both CD34+ subsets. Moreover, when added daily for 6 days, AcSDKP: (1) reduces the proliferation of both CD34+ cell fractions stimulated by 3 or 7 GFs, and (2) decreases the number of progenitors generated from the CD34+HLA-DRhigh and CD34++HLA-DRlow cell fractions. Furthermore, we show for the first time, using both high proliferative potential cell and long-term culture initiating cell assays, that AcSDKP inhibits the most primitive cells contained in the CD34++HLA-DRlow subpopulation. Finally, by using limiting dilution assays we demonstrated that AcSDKP acts directly at a single cell level and that its inhibitory effect is reversible and dose dependent.