Article,

The kinetics of granulopoiesis in long-term mouse bone marrow culture. Part I

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International journal of cell cloning, 2 (6): 394–407 (1984)

Abstract

The spontaneous stratification in long-term bone marrow cultures was illustrated and quantified. The cultures were separated into three hematopoietic layers: nonadherent cells in the supernatant medium, lightly adherent cells on top of the stromal layer, and remaining cells buried within the stromal layer. The cells of each layer were subcultured for 10 days in plastic tubes that inhibit the formation of a stromal layer. Daily samplings with absolute and differential cell counts were obtained. We identified three families of cell disappearance curves and cell types: CFU-s, hemocytoblasts, myeloblasts, and promyelocytes (G1, 2); myelocytes (G3); and postmitotic granulocytes (G4). Also, the numbers of mitotic and necrotic cells were determined. The longest half-time of CFU-s was 2.5 days. Lacking stromal support, CFU-s disappeared faster than other differentiated cells. Generally, these cells maintained their numbers for the first week of subcultures, which was attributable to a temporarily maintained balance of cell death and fresh cell production. After more than 7 days, there was a rapid decline of all differentiated cell types.

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