The present study investigated the possibility that macrophage colony- stimulating factor (M-CSF) responsiveness of hematopoietic progenitor cells is regulated at the level of receptor expression and that M-CSF receptor (M-CSFR) may be used as an early marker of monocyte lineage commitment. Immunofluorescence measurements with an anti-M-CSFR antibody showed that 44% +/- 5% of CD34hi cells expressed the receptor. The M-CSFR was present on progenitor cells that were positive for the granulo-monocytic marker CD64, but not on primitive, erythroid, or lymphoid progenitors. The CD34hiCD64+ population could be divided into subsets of M-CSFRhi and M-CSFRlo cells. In addition, a subset of CD34hiCD64-M-CSFRhi cells was found. CD34+ cells that were positive for M-CSFR, CD64, or both gave rise exclusively to granulo-monocytic cells, and 65% of the granulomonocytic colony-forming cells in the CD34+ population were recovered from these cells. Approximately 70% of the colony-forming cells (CFCs) derived from CD34hiM-CSFRhi cells were macrophage colony-forming units (CFU-M), whereas 91% of the CFCs in the CD34hiCD64+M-CSFRlo population were granulocyte colony-forming units (CFU-G). The M-CSFRhi cells with the highest frequency of colony- forming and bipotent cells and largest average colony size were found in the CD64- subset, indicating that M-CSFR appears earlier than CD64 during monocyte development. After 60 hours in culture, a subset of the CD34hiM-CSFRhi cells had downmodulated M-CSFR (29% to 38%). This population gave rise almost exclusively to granulocytes, whereas the cells that remained M-CSFRhi gave rise exclusively to monocytes. In all experiments, the M-CSFRhi population responded to M-CSF, whereas minimal responses were observed among M-CSFRlo cells. These results suggest that M-CSF target specificity among human hematopoietic progenitor cells is determined by lineage-specific regulation of the M- CSFR and show that M-CSFR is a useful marker to discriminate between monocytic and granulocytic progenitor cells.

This content is only available as a PDF.
Sign in via your Institution