Abstract
Previous in vitro investigations on enriched human hematopoietic progenitors have led to the conclusion that the purified recombinant multipoietins, interleukin 3 (IL-3) and granulocyte-macrophage colony- stimulating factor (GM-CSF) can alone induce the formation of colonies from a variety of multipotent and lineage committed progenitors. Since fetal calf serum was included in these cultures and itself might contain growth factors or other cofactors, we re-examined the actions of the CSFs in serum-deprived conditions. Results show that both the multipoietins are inadequate stimuli of colony formation. At maximal concentrations IL-3 alone induces only 25% of the granulocyte and macrophage colony-forming units (CFU-G and CFU-M) produced by a T-cell conditioned medium that contains a mixture of CSFs. When IL-3 was added at the initiation of the cultures and erythropoietin (ep), G-CSF, or M- CSF added on day 3, almost full recovery of erythroid, granulocytic, and monocytic colonies, respectively, was obtained. Similar results were obtained with GM-CSF except that fewer erythroid colonies were recovered at high concentrations, and almost maximal CFU-M proliferation could be induced. These results show that in serum- deprived conditions, the multipoietins must be combined with lineage specific CSFs for full progenitor expression.
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