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Article (Scientific journals)
Effects of marrow grafting on preleukemia cells and thymic nurse cells in C57BL/Ka mice after a leukemogenic split-dose irradiation.
Defresne, Marie-Paule; Greimers, Roland; Lenaerts, Patrick et al.
1986In Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 77 (5), p. 1079-85
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Keywords :
Animals; Bone Marrow/physiopathology; Bone Marrow Transplantation; Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation; Hematopoiesis; Leukemia, Radiation-Induced/physiopathology; Lymphocytes/physiology; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Preleukemia/pathology/physiopathology; Thymus Gland/pathology/physiopathology; Time Factors
Abstract :
[en] A split-dose regimen of whole-body irradiation (4 X 175 rad at weekly intervals) induced thymic lymphomas in C57BL/Ka mice after a latent period of 3-9 months. Meanwhile, preleukemia cells arose in the thymus and bone marrow and persisted until the onset of lymphomas. Simultaneously, thymic lymphopoiesis was impaired; thymocyte numbers were subnormal and thymic nurse cells disappeared in a progressive but irreversible fashion. The depletion of these lymphoepithelial complexes, which are normally involved in the early steps of thymic lymphopoiesis, was related to altered prothymocyte activity in bone marrow and to damaged thymic microenvironment, perhaps as a consequence of the presence of preleukemia cells. The grafting of normal bone marrow cells after irradiation prevented the development of lymphomas. However, marrow reconstitution did not inhibit the induction of preleukemia cells. They disappeared from the thymus during the second part of the latent period. At the same time, thymic lymphopoiesis was restored; thymocytes and nurse cell numbers returned to normal as a consequence of the proliferation of grafted marrow-derived cells within the thymus. The results thus demonstrated an intimate relationship between preleukemia cells and an alteration of thymic lymphopoiesis, which particularly involved the nurse cell microenvironment. Some preleukemia cells in marrow-reconstituted, irradiated mice derived from the unirradiated marrow inoculate. Thus these cells acquired neoplastic potential through a factor present in the irradiated tissues. The nature of this indirect mechanism was briefly discussed.
Disciplines :
Anatomy (cytology, histology, embryology...) & physiology
Author, co-author :
Defresne, Marie-Paule ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences biomédicales et précliniques > Histologie - Cytologie
Greimers, Roland ;  Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Liège - CHU > Anatomie pathologique
Lenaerts, Patrick
Boniver, Jacques ;  Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Liège - CHU > Anatomie pathologique
Language :
English
Title :
Effects of marrow grafting on preleukemia cells and thymic nurse cells in C57BL/Ka mice after a leukemogenic split-dose irradiation.
Publication date :
1986
Journal title :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
ISSN :
0027-8874
eISSN :
1460-2105
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, Cary, United States - North Carolina
Volume :
77
Issue :
5
Pages :
1079-85
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 19 November 2010

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