Human bone marrow (BM) CD34+ cells were stained with the vital dye, rhodamine 123 (Rh123), and analyzed for their biological properties based on the level of dye retention. Heterogeneous rhodamine staining is seen within the CD34+ population, and the staining patterns differ dramatically between fetal BM (FBM), adult BM (ABM) and mobilized peripheral blood (MPB). Kinetic analysis of the efflux of Rh123 from ABM CD34+ cells showed that efflux of Rh123 was most rapid from the most primitive Thy-1+ subset. The efflux of Rh123 could be inhibited by verapamil, suggesting that rhodamine efflux from primitive hematopoietic cells is primarily due to the P-glycoprotein (P-gp) pump or another intracellular transport system affected by verapamil. When four CD34+ subpopulations were plated onto SyS1 BM stromal cell cocultures after 1 to 2 weeks, only wells plated with CD34+ Thy- 1+Rh123lo (low-level Rh123 retention) or CD34+Thy-1+Rh123mid (mid-level Rh123 retention) cells maintained greater than 50% of cells in an uncommitted CD34+33- stage. CD34+Lin- (lineage-negative) cells were fractionated based on Rh123 dye staining into Rh123hi (high-level Rh123 retention), Rh123mid, and Rh123lo and deposited as single cells into long-term SyS1 BM stromal cell cultures. The Rh123mid fraction had immense early proliferative activity in vitro, but lost the ability to form cobblestone areas after 5 to 6 weeks in culture. In contrast, the Rh123lo fraction proliferated more slowly but sustained long-term in vitro hematopoiesis as evidenced by continued cobblestone area-forming cells (CAFC) activity for at least 6 weeks. The Rh123hi fraction showed a plating efficiency similar to that of the Rh123lo or Rh1123mid fractions but did not extensively proliferative in vitro and did not show evidence of CAFC activity. We predicted from these in vitro results that the Rh123lo subsets possesses long-term engrafting potential. Indeed, on transplantation into the SCID-hu bone assay, all long-term engrafting potential and multilineage differentiation potential resided within the Rh123lo-mid but not Rh123hi subset. Furthermore, human marrow subpopulations derived from chimeric sheep after in utero transplantation with CD34+Thy-1+Lin- cells were reisolated based on Rh123 staining. Again, CD34+Lin- subsets showing Rh123lo-mid had long-term growth in culture, whereas Rh123hiCD34+Lin- cells did not. These results show that, after injection of CD34+Thy- 1+Lin- cells into an in utero microenvironment, primitive CD34+ cells maintain a Rh123 phenotype that correlates with their in vitro CAFC activity. Thus, Rh123 staining is an effective way to define functional subsets of primitive hematopoietic cell populations.

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