Heard J M, Roussel M F, Rettenmier C W, Sherr C J
Department of Tumor Cell Biology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee 38101.
Cell. 1987 Nov 20;51(4):663-73. doi: 10.1016/0092-8674(87)90135-8.
Mouse bone marrow cells infected with a helper-free retrovirus containing v-fms were engrafted into lethally irradiated mice. Dominant provirus-positive clones emerged in the spleens of some recipients within 1 month. When spleen cells were transplanted into lethally irradiated secondary recipients, clonal erythroleukemias or B cell lymphomas expressing the v-fms-coded glycoprotein developed. Other secondary recipients repopulated by "unmarked" progenitor cells or by cryptic provirus-positive precursors present in the spleens of the same donor mice did not develop disease; thus cells expressing v-fms did not invariably have a proliferative advantage after transplantation. Several primary engrafted recipients developed myeloproliferative disorders that were provirus-positive without evidence of clonality. Although expression of the c-fms product (CSF-1 receptor) is normally restricted to cells of the mononuclear phagocyte series, the v-fms-coded glycoprotein can contribute to proliferative abnormalities of multiple hematopoietic lineages.