Evidence that hematopoiesis may be a stochastic process in vivo

Author:  ["Janis L. Abkowitz","Sandra N. Catlin","Peter Guttorp"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Medicine

Abstract

To study the behavior of hematopoietic stem cells in vivo, hematopoiesis was simulated by assuming that all stem cell decisions (that is, replication, apoptosis, initiation of a differentiation/maturation program) were determined by chance. Predicted outcomes from simulated experiments were compared with data obtained in autologous marrow transplantation studies of glucose 6–phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) heterozygous female Safari cats. With this approach, we prove that stochastic differentiation can result in the wide spectrum of discrete outcomes observed in vivo, and that clonal dominance can occur by chance. As the analyses also suggest that the frequency of feline hematopoietic stem cells is only 6 per 107 nucleated marrow cells, and that stem cells do not replicate on average more frequently than once every three weeks, these large–animal data challenge clinical strategies for marrow transplantation and gene therapy.

Cite this article

Abkowitz, J., Catlin, S. & Guttorp, P. Evidence that hematopoiesis may be a stochastic process in vivo. Nat Med 2, 190–197 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1038/nm0296-190

View full text

>> Full Text:   Evidence that hematopoiesis may be a stochastic process in vivo

T–cell mediated rejection of gene–modified HIV–specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in HIV–infected pati

Alzheimer–associated presenilins 1 and 2 : Neuronal expression in brain and localization to intracel