Differentiation in vitro of a leukemia virus-induced B-cell lymphoma into macrophages.

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Cells of the hemopoietic system arise by proliferation and differentiation of progenitor cells. This process begins with multipotential stem cells which can self-renew and also undergo progressive differentiation to progenitor cells committed to particular lineages, ultimately yielding mature blood cells (D. Metcalf and M. A. S. Moore, Haematopoietic Cells, 1971). Early commitment of lymphoid progenitors is generally believed to separate the lymphoid lineage from the myeloid and erythroid lineages, whose progenitors are separated late in differentiation (Metcalf and Moore, 1971). We recently developed a derivative of Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) in which the enhancer sequences from simian virus 40 were substituted into the M-MuLV long terminal repeat. This recombinant virus (delta Mo + SV M-MuLV) induces pre-B and B lymphoid leukemia with long latency after inoculation of 2-day-old NIH Swiss mice (R. Hanecak, P. K. Pattengale, and H. Fan, J. Virol. 62:2427-2436, 1988). In this report, we describe the derivation of a permanent, virus-producing cell line with the phenotypic characteristics of mature macrophages from a B-cell-derived lymphoblastic lymphoma induced by delta Mo + SV M-MuLV. Comparison studies of immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene rearrangements and also delta Mo + SV M-MuLV proviral integration sites confirmed that the macrophage cell line was derived from the original B-lymphoblastic lymphoma. Moreover, inoculation of the macrophage cell line into animals resulted in histiocytic sarcomas of the macrophage type, thus reflecting stable conversion of B-lymphoid tumor cells to the macrophage phenotype. These results suggest a closer relationship between lymphoid and myeloid cells than previously believed.

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