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515111 
Journal Article 
Cytokine receptors and hematopoietic differentiation 
Robb, L 
2007 
Oncogene
ISSN: 0950-9232
EISSN: 1476-5594 
26 
47 
6715-6723 
English 
Colony- stimulating factors and other cytokines signal via their cognate receptors to regulate hematopoiesis. In many developmental systems, inductive signalling determines cell fate and, by analogy with this, it has been postulated that cytokines, signalling via their cognate receptors, may play an instructive role in lineage specification in hematopoiesis. An alternative to this instructive hypothesis is the stochastic or permissive hypothesis. The latter proposes that commitment to a particular hematopoietic lineage is an event that occurs independently of extrinsic signals. It predicts that the role of cytokines is to provide nonspecific survival and proliferation signals. In this review, we look at the role of cytokine receptor signalling in hematopoiesis and consider the evidence for both hypotheses. Data from experiments that genetically manipulate receptor gene expression in vitro or in vivo are reviewed. Experiments in which cytokine receptors were installed in multipotential cells showed that, in some cases, stimulation with the cognate ligand could lead to alterations in lineage output. The creation of genetically manipulated mouse strains demonstrated that cytokine receptors are required for expansion and survival of single lineages but did not reveal a role in lineage commitment. We conclude that hematopoietic differentiation involves mainly stochastic events, but that cytokine receptors also have some instructive role. 
hematopoietin receptor; hematopoiesis; lineage commitment; colony-stimulating factor; mpl-deficient mice; leukemia inhibitory; factor; erythropoietin receptor; growth-factors; in-vivo; c-mpl; targeted disruption; signal-transduction; csf receptor