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Studies on erythropoiesis II. In vitro studies on red cell proliferation under varied oxygen tension

Abstract

For the purpose to reveal the mechanism of the stimulated erythropoiesis in anemic condition, the author observed the numerical changes of the erythroblasts from normal rabbit bone marrow cultured under the environment of varied oxygen tensions, and revealed the following: 1. The erythroblasts incubated with air are increased after 24 to 48 hours and decreased gradually disappearing by 120 hours with a corresponding increase of erythrocytes. But no active proliferation of the stem cells or proerythroblasts is observed, all the cells have differentiated to erythrocytes. Hyperoxygen tension suppresses the increase of erythroblasts slightly, while hypoxygen tension stimulates the increase. Data suggest that the cell number destined to be ineffective erythropoiesis is regulated by oxygen tensions of the environment. 2. Basophilic erythroblasts are reduced in number from the beginning showing not any increasing tendency. The reducing rate is almost the same among those cultured under the hypo- and hyperoxygen tension, comparable to that incubated with air. 3. The hypoxygen tension brings about a marked increase in the number of orthochromatic erythroblasts with a decrease in polychromatic erythroblasts suggesting an accelerated cell differentiation, while the hyperoxygen tension elicits the suppression in the formation of orthochromatic erythroblasts with suppressed differentiation. Data also show the lack of denucleation mechanism in polychromatic stages in vitro differing from the case of the bone marrow of anemic animal.</p

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