Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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The production of factors regulating the proliferation of haemopoietic spleen colony-forming cells by bone marrow macrophages.

Media conditioned by normal murine bone marrow cells contain an inhibitor of haemopoietic spleen colony-forming cell proliferation that is concentrated in a nominal 50-100K fraction. Media conditioned by regenerating marrow cells contain a proliferation-stimulatory activity that is concentrated in a nominal 30-50K fraction. Cell separation experiments demonstrated that the activities are produced by adherent, phagocytic, radioresistant, Thy 1.2- Fc+, F4/80+ cells. Cultured macrophages, obtained from long-term marrow cultures or derived from progenitor cells in methyl cellulose cultures are also capable of producing inhibitory and stimulatory activities. The results are consistent with macrophages being an important source of stem cell proliferation regulators in the bone marrow.

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