Resolution and characterization of pro-B and pre-pro-B cell stages in normal mouse bone marrow.

Richard R. Hardy(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Condie E. Carmack(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Susan A. Shinton(Fox Chase Cancer Center), John D. Kemp(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Kyoko Hayakawa(Fox Chase Cancer Center)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
May 1, 1991
Cited by 1,610Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

We have resolved B220+ IgM- B-lineage cells in mouse bone marrow into four fractions based on differential cell surface expression of determinants recognized by S7 (leukosialin, CD43), BP-1, and 30F1 (heat stable antigen). Functional differences among these fractions can be correlated with Ig gene rearrangement status. The largest fraction, lacking S7, consists of pre-B cells whereas the others, expressing S7, include B lineage cells before pre-B. These S7+ fractions, provisionally termed Fr. A, Fr. B, and Fr. C, can differentiate in a stromal layer culture system. Phenotypic alteration during such culture suggests an ordering of these stages from Fr. A to Fr. B to Fr. C and thence to S7- pre-B cells. Using polymerase chain reaction amplification with pairs of oligonucleotide primers for regions 5' of JH1, DFL16.1, and Jk1, we find that the Ig genes of Fr. A are in germline configuration, whereas Fr. B and C are pro-B cell stages with increasing D-J rearrangement, but no V-D-J. Finally, functional analysis demonstrates that the proliferative response to IL-7, an early B lineage growth factor, is restricted to S7+ stages and, furthermore, that an additional, cell contact-mediated signal is essential for survival of Fr. A.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis