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Article
Nature Medicine 4, 1038 - 1045 (1998)
doi:10.1038/2023
A newly discovered class of human hematopoietic cells with SCID-repopulating activity
Mickie Bhatia1,2, Dominique Bonnet1,3, Barbara Murdoch1, Olga I. Gan1 & John E. Dick1
Abstract
The detection of primitive hematopoietic cells based on repopulation of immune-deficient mice is a powerful tool to characterize the human stem-cell compartment. Here, we identify a newly discovered human repopulating cell, distinct from previously identified repopulating cells, that initiates multilineage hematopoiesis in NOD/SCID mice. We call such cells CD34neg- SCID repopulating cells, or CD34neg-SRC. CD34neg-SRC are restricted to a Lin–CD34 –CD38– population without detectable surface markers for multiple lineages and CD38 or those previously associated with stem cells (HLA-DR, Thy-1 and CD34). In contrast to CD34+ subfractions, Lin–CD34–CD38– cells have low clonogenicity in short-and long-term in vitro assays. The number of CD34neg-SRC increased in short-term suspension cultures in conditions that did not maintain SRC derived from CD34 + populations, providing independent biological evidence of their distinctiveness. The identification of this newly discovered cell demonstrates complexity of the organization of the human stem-cell compartment and has important implications for clinical applications involving stem-cell transplantation.
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