Inhibition of bone marrow colony formation in vitro by dialysable products of normal and neoplastic haemopoietic cells.
Author(s)
Metcalf, D;
Details
Publication Year 1971-08,Volume 49,Issue #4,Page 351-63
Journal Title
The Australian journal of experimental biology and medical science
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Dialysates of tissue culture medium conditioned by normal cells (bone marrow, thymic, spleen or lymph node) or by leukaemic cells (myelomonocytic, lymphoid or plasma cell tumour) inhibited colony formation in agar by mouse bone marrow cells. The dialysable inhibitors were not species specific, did not alter colony morphology and were heat- and ether-resistant. Leukaemic cells were as effective in producing inhibitors as normal cells, and colony formation in vitro by leukaemic cells was as susceptible to inhibition as was colony formation by normal cells. No dear evidence was obtained for the presence of similar dialysable inhibitors in the serum of normal or experimental mice, and the real biological function of these dialysable inhibitors remains in doubt.
PubMed ID
5136129
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


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