Abstract

Fetal tissues containing haematopoietic stem cells (HSC) are of potential value for allogeneic transplantation and gene therapy. Flow cytometry was used to investigate CD34+ cells from human fetal livers and umbilical cord (placental) blood (UCB). CD34+ cells, expressed as a proportion of CD45-positive leukocytes, were much more abundant in fetal livers (mean 38%) than in UCB (mean 0.3%), but fetal liver cells had lower proportions of CD34+HLA-DR+ and CD34+ CD38+ subsets. In fetal liver, there was a strong and highly significant inverse correlation between CD34+ cells (as a proportion of total leukocytes) and gestational age; no such relationship was found for subsets of CD34+ cells coexpressing CD38 or CDw90 (Thy-1), but CD34+HLA-DR+ cells were less abundant in first-compared to second-trimester livers. In UCB, a trend towards decreasing CD34+ cells (as a proportion of total leukocytes) with increasing gestational age in late pregnancy was also observed. The composition of fetal leukocytes changes during development, and therefore the timing of fetal HSC harvesting could be of relevance to transplantation outcome.

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