Abstract

Summary. The capacity of cells grown in colonies derived from human haematopoietic cells to phagocytize bacteria and to reduce nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) was studied as a measurement of functional maturation. Marrow cells from 12 non‐leukaemic patients, fivc patients with acute non‐lymphocytic leukacmia, and cells taken from a myeloblastic cell line established from a patient with acute myelo‐genous leukaemia (AML) were studied. Cells were cultured in soft agar with normal human leucocyte feeder layers as the source of stimulating factor. While the leukaemic marrows gave rise to fewer colonies than the non‐leukaemic marrows, colony formation by the AML cell line was extensive. In all instances colony formation was completely dependent upon the presence of the leucocyte feeder layers. Suspensions of pooled colonies contained 42% mature granulocytes in non‐leukaemic cultures and 41% in the leukaemic cultures. Granulocytes from these cultures showed active phagocytosis of Staphylococcus aureus and reduction of NBT. In cells taken directly from the liquid suspension culture of the AML cell line, no mature granulocytes nor phagocytosis were noted, whereas 35% and 26% of the cells removed from the colonies formed by these cells were classified as mature granulocytes, or demonstrated phagocytosis and NBT reduction respectively. These observations indicate that granulocytes in soft agar colonies derived from human haematopoietic cells are functionally mature, and that cells derivcd from a human AML cell line have the capacity to form colonies with normal maturation, if they are provided with an appropriate stimulating factor.

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