Misplaced Pages

Colony-stimulating factor

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Colony stimulating factors) Family of proteins

Colony-stimulating factors (CSFs) are secreted glycoproteins that bind to receptor proteins on the surfaces of committed progenitors in the bone marrow, thereby activating intracellular signaling pathways that can cause the cells to proliferate and differentiate into a specific kind of blood cell (usually white blood cells. For red blood cell formation, see erythropoietin).

They may be synthesized and administered exogenously. However, such molecules can at a latter stage be detected, since they differ slightly from the endogenous ones in, e.g., features of post-translational modification.

Etymology

The name "colony-stimulating factors" comes from the method by which they were discovered.

Hematopoietic stem cells were cultured (see cell culture) on a so-called semisolid matrix, which prevents cells from moving around, so that, if a single cell starts proliferating, all of the cells derived from it will remain clustered around the spot in the matrix where the first cell was originally located. These are referred to as "colonies". Therefore, it was possible to add various substances to cultures of hemopoietic stem cells and then examine which kinds of colonies (if any) were "stimulated" by them.

The substance that was found to stimulate formation of colonies of macrophages, for instance, was called macrophage colony-stimulating factor, for granulocytes, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, and so on.

Mechanism

The colony-stimulating factors are soluble (permeable), in contrast to other, membrane-bound substances of the hematopoietic microenvironment. This is sometimes used as the definition of CSFs. They transduce by paracrine, endocrine, or autocrine signaling.

Examples

Colony-stimulating factors include:

Clinical uses

  • Bone marrow stimulation
  • Stem cell mobilization

References

  1. Kumar, Vinay; Abbas, Abul K.; Aster, Jon C.; Turner, Jerrold R.; Perkins, James A.; Robbins, Stanley L.; Cotran, Ramzi S., eds. (2021). Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease (10th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier. p. 584. ISBN 978-0-323-53113-9.
  • Alberts, Bruce; et al. (2002). Molecular Biology of the Cell (4th ed.). New York, NY: Garland Science. ISBN 0-8153-4072-9.

External links

Protein, glycoconjugate: glycoproteins and glycopeptides
Mucoproteins
Mucin
Other
Proteoglycans
CS/DS
HS/CS
CS
KS
HS
Other
Growth factors
Fibroblast
FGF receptor ligands:
KGF
FGF homologous factors:
hormone-like: FGF15/19
EGF-like domain
TGFβ pathway
Insulin/IGF/
Relaxin family
Insulin and Insulin-like growth factor
Relaxin family peptide hormones
Platelet-derived
Vascular endothelial
Other
Cell signaling: cytokines
By family
Chemokine
CCL
CXCL
CX3CL
XCL
TNF
Interleukin
Type I
(grouped by
receptor
subunit)
γ chain
β chain
IL6 like/gp130
IL12 family/IL12RB1
Other
Type II
IL10 family
Interferon
I
II
Ig superfamily
IL17 family
Other
By function/
cell
Colony-stimulating factors
CFU-GEMM
CFU-GM
Granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor
Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor
Macrophage colony-stimulating factor
CFU-E
CFU-Meg
Growth factor receptor modulators
Angiopoietin
CNTF
EGF (ErbB)
EGF
(ErbB1/HER1)
ErbB2/HER2
  • Agonists: Unknown/none
ErbB3/HER3
ErbB4/HER4
FGF
FGFR1
FGFR2
FGFR3
FGFR4
Unsorted
HGF (c-Met)
IGF
IGF-1
IGF-2
Others
LNGF (p75)
PDGF
RET (GFL)
GFRα1
GFRα2
GFRα3
GFRα4
Unsorted
SCF (c-Kit)
TGFβ
Trk
TrkA
  • Negative allosteric modulators: VM-902A
TrkB
TrkC
VEGF
Others
  • Additional growth factor receptor modulators: Cerebrolysin (neurotrophin mixture)
Cytokine receptor modulators
Chemokine
CSF
Erythropoietin
G-CSF (CSF3)
GM-CSF (CSF2)
M-CSF (CSF1)
SCF (c-Kit)
Thrombopoietin
Interferon
IFNAR (α/β, I)
IFNGR (γ, II)
IFNLR (λ, III)
  • See IL-28R (IFNLR) here instead.
Interleukin
TGFβ
TNF
Others
JAK
(inhibitors)
JAK1
JAK2
JAK3
TYK2
Others
Portal:


Stub icon

This protein-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: