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Research Article

The In Vivo Effect of Liposomes on Hematopoiesis

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Pages 517-521 | Published online: 25 Mar 1999
 

Abstract

The influence of liposome structure on hematopoiesis in vivo was assessed in relation to the different contents and origins of phospholipids that make up their membrane structures. Changes within different hematopoietic cells and serum tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) levels were estimated up to 14 days following intravenous administration of liposomes made of either pure egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (LEY) or a soybean phospholipid preparation (LSB) into normal CBA mice. In peripheral blood, only transient changes within white blood cells were observed. In bone marrow, a persistent decline in the number of mature granulocytes, monocytes, and lymphocytes was found. The changes within femoral granulocytic proliferative compartments in various stages of differentiation and a maturation compartment pointed out that, parallel with the depletion of the granulocyte-storage pool, stimulation of de novo production of granulocytic cells occurred. Although both types of tested liposomes induced similar cellular changes, only liposomes made of pure egg yolk phosphatidylcholine induced a transient increase in serum TNF-α levels.

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