Literature DB >> 1173574

Leucémogénése et régénération du systémé lymphoïde chez des hybrides f1 (c3h x akr/t1ald) restaurés par des cellules médullaires et thymiques parentales.

E Legrand, M C Kressmann, J F Duplan.   

Abstract

Luekaemogenesis and repopulation of the lymphoid system have been studied in sub-lethally irradiated (c3h x akr/t1ald) f1 hybrids which have been restored with parental Bone Marrow (BM) cells with or without thymic cells. The metacentric marker of the T1ALD sub-strain made it possible to identify the host or donor orgin of leukaemias. Leukaemias occur either in the thymuc (lymphosarcomas) or in the other lymphoid tissues (extra-thymic leukaemias). After irradiation, the precentage of lymphosarcomas increases from 5 to 95%. The rate of leukaemias in hybrids which have been restored only with BM cells is 55, 56 and 100% respectively depending on the origin of BM: syngenic, C3H and AKR. In this last group 75% of the lymphosarcomas originate from donor cells. The inhibitory efficiency of the three kinds of BM on luekaemogenesis seems to be related to their respective abilities to spontaneous malignant transformation. When AKR or C3H thymic cells are injected together with BM cells, leukaemogenesis is altered. The effect is indirect as these cells are not actually concerned by the malignant transformation. The percentage of LS is significantly reduced and the mean survival improved in hybrids restored with C3H thymic, mixed AKR or C3H BM cells. AKR thymic cells are less efficient. In both cases, the percentage of extra thymic leukaemias increases at the expense of lymphosarcomas. Thymic cells do not change the kinetics of repopulation in thymus and lymph-node by the BM cells, except when C3H thymic cells are mixed with T1ALD BM cells; in this case, the lymph-node repopulation is temporarily enhanced. Different hypotheses might explain the effect of thymic cells on leukaemogenesis: enhanced recovery of the postirradiation immunological deficiency, transfer of virus by the AKR thymic cells, and more probably influence of the thymic cells on the maturation or/and differentiation of the lymphoid cells.

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Year:  1975        PMID: 1173574     DOI: 10.1002/ijc.2910150407

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  2 in total

1.  Hemopoietic stem cells and target cells in murine-virus-induced leukemias.

Authors:  H J Seidel
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  1982       Impact factor: 4.553

2.  Potential leukemic cells among bone marrow cells of young AKR/J mice.

Authors:  N Haran-Ghera
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1980-05       Impact factor: 11.205

  2 in total

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