Abstract
The effect of varying concentrations of interferon-α (IFN-α) on the in vitro colony growth from all single-lineage human hematopoietic colony-forming progenitor cells was evaluated. IFN-α was tested at concentrations of 0, 2, 20, and 200 U/ml in optimally stimulated bone marrow cultures from each of 4 volunteer donors. Substantial donor-to-donor variability and distinct, lineage-specific patterns of stem cell sensitivity to IFN-α were observed. In the erythroid series, the more primitive progenitor or burst-forming unit(BFU-E) was substasntially more resistant to growth inhibition at low IFN-α concentrations than the mature colony-forming unit (CFU-E). Colony growth by the megakaryocyte progenitor cell(CFU-Meg) was decreased by all concentrations of IFN-α which produced a biphasic, inhibitory dose response. The response of the colony-forming unit granulocyte/macrophage (CFU-GM) was heterogeneous among the donors tested. CFU-GM growth from 2 donors was insensitive to IFN-α at all concentrations. Conversely, CFU-GM from the other 2 donors manifested a steep dose-response curve that was similar to that of the CFU-E. These data demonstrate a heterogeneity of progenitor cell sensitivity to growth suppression by IFN-α which appears to be influenced by (i) hematopoietic lineage, (ii) degree of differentiation of the progenitor cell, and (iii) individual variability.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
