BONE-MARROW CELLS FROM A/J MICE DO NOT PROLIFERATE IN INTERLEUKIN-3 BUT EXPRESS NORMAL NUMBERS OF INTERLEUKIN-3 RECEPTORS
Details
Publication Year 1992-11,Volume 82,Issue #3,Page 488-493
Journal Title
BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Haemopoietic cells from A/J mice do not form colonies (proliferate) in response to interleukin-3 (multi-CSF, IL-3). We have examined different populations of cells from A/J mice and shown that, despite their failure to proliferate in response to IL-3, cells from bone marrow, spleen and the peritoneum all bound I-125-labelled IL-3. A wide variety of cell types bound IL-3 as determined by autoradiography, including promyelocytes, myelocytes, metamyelocytes, polymorphs, promonocytes, monocytes, eosinophils and lymphocytes, but not nucleated erythroid cells, and the proportion of each cell type binding label was similar when cells from A/J mice were compared with those of C57B1/6 and Balb/c mice. Bone marrow cells from A/J mice internalized interleukin-3 with normal kinetics and mRNA extracted from these cells contains the same species of IL-3 receptor and IL-3 receptor-like mRNAs as are found in the other strains. Collectively the data suggest that the failure of haemopoietic cells from A/J mice to proliferate in response to IL-3 is related to a selective defect in signalling to proliferation specific genes. This defect is apparently not related to internalization or processing of the IL-3/IL-3-receptor complex, but may be due to failure to activate appropriate accessory molecules in the cell.
Publisher
BLACKWELL SCIENCE LTD
Keywords
COLONY-FORMING CELLS; SUBPOPULATIONS; IL-3
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 1992-11-01 12:00:00
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