de Witte T, Koekman E, Geestman E, Plas A, Blankenborg G, Wessels J, Haanen C
Blut. 1984 Mar;48(3):139-45. doi: 10.1007/BF00320336.
Counterflow centrifugation with continuous monitoring of the output for cell number and cell scatter was used to separate low density (d less than 1.070 g/ml) human bone marrow cells in two fractions: one containing the majority of small size lymphocytes and the other the majority of the larger sized committed progenitor cells. The recovery of the pluripotent stem cells (CFU-GEMM) in the large cell fraction was complete. The mitogenic reactivity of this putative stem cell fraction had decreased to 6% and 11%, of the original value as measured with phytohemagglutinin stimulation and one way mixed lymphocytic culture respectively. Counterflow centrifugation offers a physical separation technique, by which the majority of the immunoreactive cells can be separated from the pluripotent hematopoietic stem cells.