Abstract

The cell proliferation relating an uncommitted precursor cell to a differentiated terminal cell has been quantitated. HL-60 promyelocytes, a bipotent precursor cell capable of differentiating along either the myeloid or monocytic pathway, were induced by a human lymphocyte-conditioned medium (CM) to differentiate into macrophage-like cells. The promyelocytes had a generation time of approx. 42 h. Most promyelocytes which differentiated became macrophage-like cells after only one cell division. Some, a minority, underwent more than one division. The time between induction of differentiation and expression of differentiated characteristics could thus be very short. Labelled S-phase promyelocytes could differentiate after traversing S, G2 and undergoing mitosis. Some, approx. 21%, required a subsequent complete cell cycle before differentiating. The data suggest a model in which cells must undergo a S-phase-specific differentiation control event in the presence of CM in order to differentiate in the subsequent G1 phase. This model proposes that a discrete time in S phase exists when cells are susceptible to exogenous regulation directing them to yield differentiated daughter cells.

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