Role of marrow stromal cells in the establishment of a transformed lymphoblastic B-cell line from a normal human subject

A monoclonal human B-lymphoblastoid cell line (UTMB-460) arose spontaneously from the bone marrow of a normal healthy woman who was seropositive for an EB-virus infection. Chromosomally, the UTMB-460 cells are near tetraploid, with a specific translocation (8;9) (p11.2; p24), and have surface IgMk....

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Veröffentlicht in:Leukemia research 1986, Vol.10 (10), p.1209-1219
Hauptverfasser: Juneja, Harinder S., Rajaraman, Sirinivasan, Ramsey, Keith M., Elder, Frederick F.B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A monoclonal human B-lymphoblastoid cell line (UTMB-460) arose spontaneously from the bone marrow of a normal healthy woman who was seropositive for an EB-virus infection. Chromosomally, the UTMB-460 cells are near tetraploid, with a specific translocation (8;9) (p11.2; p24), and have surface IgMk. The UTMB-460 cells are resistant to killing in vitro by spontaneous and rIFNα2 and rIL-2 stimulated NK cells from the patient and other normal subjects, but are killed by lymphokine activated killer cells. The index patient has not developed leukemia/lymphoma during the follow-up interval of 22 months. The growth of UTMB-460 cells is supported by undefined growth factors in FCS and by BCGF in the absence of FCS. rIL-2 stimulates DNA synthesis by UTMB-460 cells. The UTMB-460 cells were adherent to the normal MSC in the primary culture and show specific heterotypic adherence to normal MSC when compared to skin fibroblasts. In addition, 6/6 normal marrow stromal cells and 4/6 normal skin fibroblasts induced growth of colonies from UTMB-460 cells. These data suggest that MSC interacted with the transformed cells (UTMB-460) in vitro and played a critical role in the establishment of the UTMB-460 cell line.
ISSN:0145-2126
1873-5835
DOI:10.1016/0145-2126(86)90239-0