Abstract

Murine spleen cells stimulated in vitro with pokeweed mitogen were fused with a HAT-sensitive AKR thymoma (BW5147) to produce T-cell hybridomas secreting hemopoietic colony-stimulating factors (CSFs). A stable cloned T-cell hybridoma has been isolated which expressed the H-2 antigens of both fusion parents, has a median chromosome number of 56 and secretes a factor(s) which stimulates the growth of granulocyte-macrophage and eosinophil colonies. The CSF-secreting hybridoma exhibited only the Thy 1.1 associated with the parent tumor, but no markers normally associated with normal T-cells or macrophages were detected. No CSF was secreted by the parent tumor line, but the hybridoma-conditioned medium, when used at 10% (v/v), contained sufficient CSF to stimulate 10–30 colonies per 10 5 bone marrow cells. Lipopolysaccharide (1 μg/ml) stimulated the production of CSF by the hybridoma cells 3 fold. CSF production also increased when the cells were held at high density in serum-free medium. The colony-stimulating factor(s) secreted by the hybridoma exhibited similar molecular properties to those produced by pokeweed mitogen-stimulated spleen cells, and both the GM- and EO-CSFs had an apparent molecular weight by gel filtration of approximately 35,000.

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