Conclusions
Exogenous BMCs do not rescue non-irradiated mice from acute renal tubular damage caused by HgCl(2), despite establishment of chimerism and cell proliferation in bone marrow and spleen.
Methods
Ten-week-old female mice were assigned into control non-irradiated animals having only vehicle treatment, HgCl(2)-treated non-irradiated mice, HgCl(2)-treated non-irradiated mice infused with male BMCs 1 day after HgCl(2), and vehicle-treated mice with male BMCs. Tritiated thymidine was given 1 h before animal killing.
Objective
Various studies have shown that bone marrow stem cells can rescue mice from acute renal tubular damage under a conditioning advantage (irradiation or cisplatin treatment) favouring donor cell engraftment and regeneration; however, it is not known whether bone marrow cells (BMCs) can contribute to repair of acute tubular damage in the absence of a selection pressure for the donor cells. The aim of this study was to examine this possibility. Materials and
Results
Donor BMCs could not alleviate non-irradiated mice from acute tubular damage caused by HgCl(2), deduced by no reduction in serum urea nitrogen combined with negligible cell engraftment. However, donor BMCs could home to the bone marrow and spleen and display proliferative activity. This is the first report to show that despite no preparative myeloablation of recipients, engrafted donor BMCs can synthesize DNA in the bone marrow and spleen. Conclusions: Exogenous BMCs do not rescue non-irradiated mice from acute renal tubular damage caused by HgCl(2), despite establishment of chimerism and cell proliferation in bone marrow and spleen.
