Avalos B R, Broudy V C, Ceselski S K, Druker B J, Griffin J D, Hammond W P
Department of Internal Medicine, Ohio State University, Columbus 43210.
Blood. 1994 Aug 1;84(3):789-94.
A decrease in responsiveness to granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) has been implicated in the pathophysiology of cyclic hematopoiesis. Using the canine model of cyclic neutropenia, we examined the response of neutrophil precursors to G-CSF in vitro and G-CSF receptor expression in neutrophils from grey collie dogs to determine whether the abnormal response observed to G-CSF in vivo in this disorder is present at the level of the progenitor cell and is caused by defective G-CSF receptor expression. Bone marrow mononuclear cells from grey collie dogs required sevenfold higher G-CSF concentrations than normal dog cells to achieve half-maximal colony growth [56 pmol/L v 8 pmol/L). Receptor binding assays with 125I-labeled G-CSF and Scatchard analyses of the equilibrium binding data were consistent with expression of a single class of high-affinity receptors for G-CSF on neutrophils from both normal dogs and grey collies with similar receptor numbers (56 to 446 sites/cell v 78 to 199 sites/cell) and binding affinities (28 to 206 pmol/L v 84 to 195 pmol/L). Chemical cross-linking studies identified a G-CSF binding protein of approximately 120 kD on neutrophils from grey collies, similar in size to that on normal dog neutrophils. No abnormal G-CSF receptor mRNA transcripts were detected in neutrophils from grey collie dogs by Northern blot analysis. Treatment of both normal and grey collie neutrophils with G-CSF rapidly induced tyrosine phosphorylation of an 80-kD protein that behaved like canine c-rel. These results demonstrate that the abnormal responsiveness to G-CSF in canine cyclic hematopoiesis is present in neutrophil precursors and is not associated with demonstrable alterations in the number, binding affinity, or overall size of the G-CSF receptor in neutrophils, or with defective tyrosine phosphorylation of p80. These data suggest that cyclic hematopoiesis is caused by a defect in the G-CSF signal transduction pathway at a point distal to G-CSF receptor binding that does not involve the early biochemical events leading to p80 tyrosine phosphorylation.
对粒细胞集落刺激因子(G-CSF)反应性降低与周期性造血的病理生理学有关。利用周期性中性粒细胞减少症的犬模型,我们在体外检测了中性粒细胞前体对G-CSF的反应以及来自灰柯利犬的中性粒细胞中G-CSF受体的表达,以确定在这种疾病中体内观察到的对G-CSF的异常反应是否存在于祖细胞水平,以及是否由有缺陷的G-CSF受体表达引起。来自灰柯利犬的骨髓单个核细胞达到半数最大集落生长所需的G-CSF浓度比正常犬细胞高7倍[56 pmol/L对8 pmol/L]。用125I标记的G-CSF进行受体结合测定以及对平衡结合数据进行Scatchard分析,结果表明正常犬和灰柯利犬的中性粒细胞上均表达一类单一的高亲和力G-CSF受体,受体数量相似(56至446个位点/细胞对78至199个位点/细胞),结合亲和力也相似(28至206 pmol/L对84至195 pmol/L)。化学交联研究在灰柯利犬的中性粒细胞上鉴定出一种约120 kD的G-CSF结合蛋白,其大小与正常犬中性粒细胞上的相似。通过Northern印迹分析未在灰柯利犬的中性粒细胞中检测到异常的G-CSF受体mRNA转录本。用G-CSF处理正常和灰柯利犬的中性粒细胞均能迅速诱导一种80-kD蛋白的酪氨酸磷酸化,该蛋白表现得类似于犬c-rel。这些结果表明,犬周期性造血中对G-CSF的异常反应存在于中性粒细胞前体中,并且与中性粒细胞中G-CSF受体的数量、结合亲和力或总体大小的明显改变无关,也与p80的酪氨酸磷酸化缺陷无关。这些数据表明,周期性造血是由G-CSF信号转导途径中G-CSF受体结合远端的缺陷引起的,该缺陷不涉及导致p80酪氨酸磷酸化的早期生化事件。