| Literature DB >> 10371358 |
W Leung1, M Ramírez, C I Civin.
Abstract
Cord blood (CB) and autologous mobilized peripheral blood stem/progenitor cells (PBSC) are now used widely for clinical transplantation. We characterized the short-term (<8 weeks) and long-term (>8 weeks) engraftment in NOD/SCID mice resulting from transplanted CD34+ cells from these two sources. We also quantified the frequency of long-term engrafting cells, and the average proliferative capacity of individual engrafting cells by a competitive repopulation assay with binomial variance-covariance modeling. We found that 0.5 million CD34+ CB cells were able to generate sustained, high-level, multilineage human hematopoiesis, whereas a sixfold higher number of CD34+ PBSC (3 million) from cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy generated comparable short-term, but much lower sustained multilineage human hematopoiesis after transplantation. In comparison to CD34+ cells from PBSC from cancer patients, long-term engrafting cells were approximately eightfold enriched in CB CD34+ cells, and each CB long-term engrafting cell had an approximately 15-fold higher multilineage proliferative capacity. Thus, the number and function of transplantable hematopoietic cells were remarkably different between these two sources of stem/progenitor cells.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10371358 DOI: 10.1053/bbmt.1999.v5.pm10371358
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Blood Marrow Transplant ISSN: 1083-8791 Impact factor: 5.742