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Quantitative effects of Nf1 inactivation on in vivo hematopoiesis
Youyan Zhang, … , Kevin Shannon, D. Wade Clapp
Youyan Zhang, … , Kevin Shannon, D. Wade Clapp
Published September 1, 2001
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2001;108(5):709-715. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI12758.
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Article

Quantitative effects of Nf1 inactivation on in vivo hematopoiesis

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Abstract

The NF1 tumor-suppressor gene is frequently inactivated in juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia, and Nf1 mutant mice model this myeloproliferative disorder (MPD). Competitive repopulation assays were performed to quantify the proliferative advantage of Nf1–/– hematopoietic cells in vivo. Nf1 mutant stem cells demonstrated a growth advantage that was greatest in myeloid lineage cells and least pronounced in T lymphocytes. Surprisingly, although low numbers of Nf1-deficient cells consistently outcompeted wild-type cells, levels of chimerism were stable over months of observation, and MPD was not observed unless threshold numbers of mutant cells were injected. These data showing that normal competitor cells can strongly modulate the growth of mutant populations in vivo have general implications for modeling cancer in the mouse. In particular, strains in which cancer-associated mutations are expressed in fields of target cells may not accurately model early events in tumorigenesis because they eliminate the requirement for a mutant clone to outcompete resident normal cells.

Authors

Youyan Zhang, Brigit R. Taylor, Kevin Shannon, D. Wade Clapp

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Figure 1

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Leukocyte counts, spleen sizes, and survival in recipients of Nf1–/– fet...
Leukocyte counts, spleen sizes, and survival in recipients of Nf1–/– fetal liver cells from C57BL/6, 129/Sv, or F1 embryos. (a and b) Recipients injected with wild-type C57BL/6 fetal liver cells are denoted by open squares, and recipients injected with Nf1–/– C57BL/6 cells are denoted by filled squares. Recipients that received wild-type or Nf1–/– 129/Sv fetal liver cells are denoted by open and filled triangles, respectively. Leukocyte counts and percentage of survival 2–6 months after adoptive transfer. (c) Spleen weights at sacrifice. Filled bars represent C57BL/6. Open bars represent 129/Sv. *P < 0.05 comparing –/– to +/+ spleen weight within the same donor strain. (d) Total leukocyte (WBC) and myeloid cell counts of recipient mice reconstituted with either Nf1–/– (squares) or wild-type (circles) fetal liver cells from F1 129/Sv × C57BL/6 embryos. Recipient strain had no effect on WBC counts, survival, or spleen size (data not shown). WBC, white blood cell.

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