Abstract

AbstractRegulation of haematopoiesis was investigated by studying the response of haematopoietic tissues of mice to a perturbation of the steady state by vinblastine (VLB). Progenitor cells were quantified ly limiting dilution analysis of diffusion chamber cultures of haematopoietic cells and by the spleen colony technique. The diffusion chamber technique appears to assay granulocyte progenitor cells and those multipotent progenitor cells that become committed to granulopoiesis during chamber culture. The spleen colony technique probably assays multipotent progenitor cells.Decaying oscillatory responses to VLB were observed for progenitor cells as well as for differentiating cells in bone marrow. The period lengths of the diffusion chamber progenitor cell oscillations might indicate that these were induced by humoral feedback signal(s) from nonproliferative granulocytes. The oscillations of the multipotent progenitor cells of bone marrow were less pronounced and were earlier damped than those of the granulocyte progenitor cells. This may support the hypotesis that multipotent progenitor cells are regulated by more efficient mechanisms, which may depend on short range cell‐cell interactions rather than long range humoral regulators.

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