Abstract

Human fibrotic bone marrow (BM) stroma has been shown to contain alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA)-positive cells. These closely resemble myofibroblasts that were described in other fibrotic tissues. We studied the expression of alpha-SMA in a series of murine BM-derived stromal cell lines to investigate the cellular origin and functional significance of myofibroblast-like cells in hematopoietic tissues. Although these cell lines differed in their biologic properties, most of them expressed alpha-SMA under certain conditions. Cells expressing alpha-SMA constituted a minor population in post-confluent, growth-arrested cultures. However, the incidence of cells expressing alpha-SMA increased significantly when cultures were transferred to nonconfluent conditions. A similar increase in alpha-SMA-positive cells occurred after a strip of cells was scraped away from the confluent cell layer; the cells of the affected area acquired alpha-SMA-positive contractile phenotype. The relationship between alpha-SMA expression and hematopoietic activity was studied using a cloned cell line of BM origin (14F1.1). The ability of these endothelial-adipocyte cells to support hematopoiesis in vitro was maximal under confluent conditions, whereas their expression of alpha-SMA under such conditions was residual. Moreover, in long-term BM cultures supported by confluent 14F1.1 cells, stromal areas associated with proliferating hematopoietic precursors, known as "cobblestone areas," were devoid of alpha-SMA-positive cells. These observations suggest that the expression of alpha-SMA is reversible and inversely related to hematopoietic activity.

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