1977-03-30
Microenvironments of T and B lymphocytes : a light- and electromicroscopic study
Publication
Publication
Peripheral blood cells- erythrocytes, granulocytes, monocytes, thrombocytes and lymphocytes-are the end products of a differentiation process which occurs in the bone marrow and, in rodents, also in the spleen. Normal haemopoietic tissue is a cell renewal system with an accurate balance between cell production originating from pluripotent haemopoietic stem cells and continuous cell loss. The important function of haemopoietic stem cells was emphasized by Till and McCulloch (1961) in bone marrow transplantation studies in mice. They noted that intravenous injection of small numbers of bone marrow cells into lethally irradiated syngeneic recipient mice caused the appearance of haemopoietic colonies in the spleen of the recipient mice. These colonies consisted either of erythroid, gran uloid, megakaryocytic or mixed cell populations (Curry and Trentln, 1967). The technique used by Till and McCulloch is known as the "spleen colony assay" and has established two major qualities of haemopoietic stem cells: (I) they have the capacity of self replication (Trentin and Fahlberg, 1963; Curry et a!., 1967) and (2) they are pluripotent since they give rise to clones of different cell types of which the differentiated "end" cells recirculate in the blood (Till and McCulloch, 1961; Becker eta!., 1963; Till, 1976). In contrast to erythroid and myeloid colonies, lymphoid colonies were not detectable with the spleen colony assay; however, Ford et al. (1966), Micklem et a!. (1966), and Wu et a!. (1968) demonstrated with chromosome marker techniques that lymphoid cells were also derived from pluripotent haemopoietic stem cells. One of the major questions in cell biological investigations of haemopoiesis concerns the factors which determine the commitment and differentiation of pluripotent haemopoietic stem cells. At present it is generally accepted that two types of factors are involved in the regulation of haemopoiesis: (I) microenvironmental factors (see 1.2), and (2) humoral factors (see 1.4).
Additional Metadata | |
---|---|
, | |
O. Vos | |
Erasmus University Rotterdam | |
hdl.handle.net/1765/26042 | |
Organisation | Erasmus MC: University Medical Center Rotterdam |
van Ewijk, W. (1977, March 30). Microenvironments of T and B lymphocytes : a light- and electromicroscopic study. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1765/26042 |