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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 May 31.
Published in final edited form as: Cell Rep. 2016 May 12;15(8):1848–1857. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.04.061

Figure 5. All-Cell-Type Clones Produce Disproportionately Large Numbers of Blood Cells.

Figure 5

Clones were categorized as “early and all cell types” (produced granulocytes one and/or two months post transplantation, and produced every measured cell type six months after transplantation), “late and all cell types” (produced every measured cell type six months after transplantation, but did not produce granulocytes one or two months post transplantation), early and specialized (produced granulocytes one and/or two months post transplantation, but did not produce every cell type six months post transplantation) or late and specialized (did not produce granulocytes one or two months post transplantation, and did not produce every cell type six months post transplantation). Percentages represent the average amount of blood cell production by a category of clones six months post transplantation. If the average amount of blood production by a category of clones was less than 0.5%, it was not shown. See also Tables S4-S5. 7-8 mice were used per transplantation dose.