Witte P L, Kincade P W, Vĕtvicka V
Eur J Immunol. 1986 Jul;16(7):779-87. doi: 10.1002/eji.1830160711.
A recently described long-term culture system offers a unique experimental approach for dissecting regulatory mechanisms that control the developmental progression of B-lineage lymphocytes. Lymphoid cells, including B cells and their precursors, can be maintained for prolonged periods in strict dependence on a layer of adherent cells. However, before this system can yield to interpretable manipulation, much information is needed as to the identity and temporal phenotypic stability of both lymphoid and nonlymphoid cells. The findings reported here provide answers to some of those important questions. Successful establishment of lymphoid cells in culture was extraordinarily dependent on the batch of fetal calf serum used in the medium, and some undesirable serum lots supported cultures that were virtually all myeloid. With standardized culture conditions, various populations of lymphoid cells were identified on the basis of B-lineage differentiation markers and culture to culture variation was assessed. Lymphocytes that were firmly attached to the adherent cells were carefully compared to nonadherent lymphocytes in terms of cycle status, phenotype, size, and transferrin receptor expression. They were essentially identical in all of these respects and a partitioning of proliferating cells and their progeny in the cultures was therefore not apparent. It is also noteworthy that although a high mitotic rate was maintained, a majority of the cells were small lymphocytes. The outgrowth of identifiable B-lineage cells (detected with monoclonal 14.8 antibodies) in replicate cultures was initially similar, but the extent of interculture variation increased dramatically during the period 4-6 weeks after initiation of culture. Replicate cultures established from the same marrow cell pool often differed as much as 20-fold in numbers of 14.8-positive cells. After this time, the composition of individual cultures evolved much more gradually, and numbers of B cells and pre-B cells remained relatively constant. This indicates that subsets of lymphocytes become established in each culture dish during a discrete phase. At least two types of supporting adherent cells predominated in these cultures: typical macrophages and very large, nonphagocytic cells resembling adventitial reticular cells. The latter included subpopulations resolved on the basis of alkaline phosphatase content. In contrast to the lymphoid populations, proportions of these adherent cell types were relatively invariant among replicate cultures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
最近描述的一种长期培养系统为剖析控制B淋巴细胞谱系发育进程的调控机制提供了一种独特的实验方法。包括B细胞及其前体细胞在内的淋巴细胞,可以在严格依赖一层贴壁细胞的情况下长期维持培养。然而,在这个系统能够进行可解释的操作之前,需要了解许多关于淋巴细胞和非淋巴细胞的身份以及时间表型稳定性的信息。本文报道的研究结果为其中一些重要问题提供了答案。在培养中成功建立淋巴细胞极其依赖于培养基中所用的胎牛血清批次,一些不理想的血清批次支持的培养物几乎全是髓细胞。在标准化培养条件下,根据B细胞谱系分化标志物鉴定出各种淋巴细胞群体,并评估了不同培养物之间的差异。将牢固附着于贴壁细胞的淋巴细胞与未贴壁的淋巴细胞在细胞周期状态、表型、大小和转铁蛋白受体表达方面进行了仔细比较。它们在所有这些方面基本相同,因此在培养物中增殖细胞及其后代没有明显的划分。同样值得注意的是,尽管维持了较高的有丝分裂率,但大多数细胞是小淋巴细胞。在重复培养中,可识别的B细胞谱系细胞(用单克隆14.8抗体检测)的生长最初相似,但在培养开始后的4 - 6周期间,不同培养物之间的差异程度急剧增加。从同一骨髓细胞库建立的重复培养物中,14.8阳性细胞的数量差异常常高达20倍。在此之后,各个培养物的组成变化更为缓慢,B细胞和前B细胞的数量保持相对恒定。这表明淋巴细胞亚群在一个离散阶段在每个培养皿中得以确立。在这些培养物中,至少有两种类型的支持性贴壁细胞占主导:典型的巨噬细胞和非常大的、类似外膜网状细胞的非吞噬细胞。后者包括根据碱性磷酸酶含量区分的亚群。与淋巴细胞群体不同,这些贴壁细胞类型在重复培养物中的比例相对不变。(摘要截选至400字)