We have previously reported the isolation of a monoclonal antibody (NHL- 30.5) that reacts with an antigen expressed on a substantial proportion of marrow and blood cells of most patients with newly diagnosed or relapsing acute myeloid leukemia. This antigen is also found on several cell lines derived from myeloid malignancies of human origin. It is not present on mature hemopoietic cells or on the majority of differentiating bone marrow cells. In order to determine whether the NHL-30.5 antigen may, nevertheless, be expressed on low-frequency primitive normal hemopoietic cells, not detected in standard antibody screening procedures, its expression was studied on clonogenic erythropoietic and granulopoietic cells. Light-density (less than 1.077 g/mL) suspensions of normal or chronic myelogenous leukemia bone marrow and peripheral blood cells were stained with NHL-30.5 and fluorescein isothiocyanate labeled second antibody and then sorted into two fractions using the fluorescence-activated cell sorter. The first contained the top 5% of cells with the highest fluorescence intensity. The remainder were collected in the second fraction. Colony assays of both fractions showed the first to be enriched in CFU-E, BFU-E, and CFU- C content (fourfold to 17-fold). The second fraction was correspondingly depleted of these progenitors. These findings reveal NHL-30.5 antigen expression to be a transient event during normal hemopoiesis that characterizes primitive hemopoietic cells on several pathways. Subsequent experiments showed that the presence of up to 10 micrograms/mL of purified NHL-30.5 antibody in colony assay cultures neither inhibited nor stimulated colony formation. Marrow fibroblasts (subcultured marrow adherent cells) were NHL-30.5 negative. Immunoprecipitation studies showed that the antigen detected by NHL- 30.5 is clearly distinct from that identified by My-10, another monoclonal antibody that has previously shown some similarities to NHL- 30.5. It thus appears that the NHL-30.5 antibody reacts with a new myeloid differentiation antigen of as yet unidentified function that is normally restricted in its expression to early stages of hemopoiesis.

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