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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (
trypsin
)
42,187
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Human mast cell precursors arise in the bone marrow and circulate to different tissue microenvironments, where they develop distinct phenotypes that may be characterized by differential expression of the serine protease, chymase. The growth and development of mast cells is stimulated by mast cell growth factor, which is also known as kit ligand because its obligate receptor is
KIT
, the protein product of the c-KIT proto-oncogene. The in vivo influence of the
KIT
-kit ligand axis on the phenotype of human mast cells has not been determined. We used immunohistochemistry to detect in situ expression of
tryptase
and chymase by mast cells of a patient with urticaria pigmentosa and aggressive systemic mastocytosis, whose pathologic mast cells are clonally derived and chronically stimulated by
KIT
because they all contain the same point mutation causing constitutive activation of
KIT
. Mast cells in both spleen and skin expressed
tryptase
, but only in the skin did a majority of mast cells express chymase. We conclude that chronic stimulation of the
KIT
-kit ligand axis does not irrevocably commit mast cells to a chymase-positive or chymase-negative phenotype. These findings suggest that factors other than kit ligand predominate in determining mast cell phenotype.
...
PMID:Chronically KIT-stimulated clonally-derived human mast cells show heterogeneity in different tissue microenvironments. 945 20
Systemic mastocytosis is a disease of mast cell proliferation that may be associated with hematologic disorders. There are no features on examination that allow the diagnosis of systemic disease, and mast cell-derived mediators, which may be elevated in urine or blood, may also be elevated in individuals with severe allergic disorders. Thus, the diagnosis usually depends on results of bone marrow biopsy. To facilitate evaluation, surrogate markers of the extent and severity of the disease are needed. Because of the association of mastocytosis with hematologic disease, plasma levels were measured for soluble
KIT
(sKIT) and soluble interleukin-2 receptor alpha chain (sCD25), which are known to be cleaved in part from the mast cell surface and are elevated in some hematologic malignancies. Results revealed that levels of both soluble receptors are increased in systemic mastocytosis. Median plasma sKIT concentrations as expressed by AU/mL (1 AU = 1.4 ng/mL) were as follows: controls, 176 (n = 60); urticaria pigmentosa without systemic involvement, 194 (n = 8); systemic indolent mastocytosis, 511 (n = 30); systemic mastocytosis with an associated hematologic disorder, 1320 (n = 7); aggressive mastocytosis, 3390 (n = 3). Plasma sCD25 levels were elevated in systemic mastocytosis; the highest levels were associated with extensive bone marrow involvement. Levels of sKIT correlated with total
tryptase
levels, sCD25 levels, and bone marrow pathology. These results demonstrate that sKIT and sCD25 are useful surrogate markers of disease severity in patients with mastocytosis and should aid in diagnosis, in the selection of those needing a bone marrow biopsy, and in the documentation of disease progression. (Blood. 2000;96:1267-1273)
...
PMID:Soluble stem cell factor receptor (CD117) and IL-2 receptor alpha chain (CD25) levels in the plasma of patients with mastocytosis: relationships to disease severity and bone marrow pathology. 1094 67
A novel subtype of myeloid leukemia exhibiting a partial differentiation of mast cell-lineage cells is described. The disease is characterized by an increase in myeloblasts as well as an increase in immature (blast-like) metachromatic cells (>10% in bone marrow or blood smears). Metachromatic cells express
KIT
(CD117) and
tryptase
, but lack basophil-related antigens. In contrast to mast cell leukemia/systemic mastocytosis, metachromatic cells do not express CD2 or CD25, do not form multifocal dense aggregates in the bone marrow, and do not exhibit transforming mutations at codon 816 of c-kit. In the few patients recorded so far, a complex karyotype without recurring anomaly was found. The prognosis appears to be grave, although complete remission in response to chemotherapy has been described.
...
PMID:Myelomastocytic leukemia: myeloid neoplasm characterized by partial differentiation of mast cell-lineage cells. 1203 70
Despite maturation arrest, blast cells in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are often capable of expressing lineage-restricted (granulomonocytic or myelomastocytic) differentiation antigens. Tryptases are lineage-associated serine proteases primarily expressed in mast cells, and less abundantly in blood basophils. We have recently shown that myeloblasts in a group of patients with AML (approximately 40%) produce significant amounts of
tryptase
(s). In these patients, serum tryptase levels are elevated (> 15 ng/ml) and reflect the total burden of leukemic cells. In most cases, myeloblasts express alpha-
tryptase
mRNA in excess over beta-tryptase mRNA, and secrete the respective protein (= pro-alpha-
tryptase
) in a constitutive manner. It was also found that these AML blasts frequentlyco-express
tryptase
with additional mast cell lineage- and/or basophil-related differentiation antigens including
KIT
(CD117), histamine, and 2D7. We hypothesize that
tryptase
-positive AMLs arise from a leukemic progenitor that exhibits a limited potential to differentiate into mast cells and/or basophils.
...
PMID:Tryptase a novel biochemical marker of acute myeloid leukemia. 1261 10
Since serum tryptase levels are elevated in some patients with myeloproliferative disorders, we examined their utility in identifying a subset of patients with hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES) and an underlying myeloproliferative disorder. Elevated serum tryptase levels (> 11.5 ng/mL) were present in 9 of 15 patients with HES and were associated with other markers of myeloproliferation, including elevated B12 levels and splenomegaly. Although bone marrow biopsies in these patients showed increased numbers of CD25+ mast cells and atypical spindle-shaped mast cells, patients with HES and elevated serum tryptase could be distinguished from patients with systemic mastocytosis and eosinophilia by their clinical manifestations, the absence of mast cell aggregates, the lack of a somatic
KIT
mutation, and the presence of the recently described fusion of the Fip1-like 1 (FIP1L1) gene to the platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha gene (PDGFRA). Patients with HES and elevated serum tryptase were more likely to develop fibroproliferative end organ damage, and 3 of 9 died within 5 years of diagnosis in contrast to 0 of 6 patients with normal serum tryptase levels. All 6 patients with HES and elevated
tryptase
treated with imatinib demonstrated a clinical and hematologic response. In summary, elevated serum tryptase appears to be a sensitive marker of a myeloproliferative variant of HES that is characterized by tissue fibrosis, poor prognosis, and imatinib responsiveness.
...
PMID:Elevated serum tryptase levels identify a subset of patients with a myeloproliferative variant of idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome associated with tissue fibrosis, poor prognosis, and imatinib responsiveness. 1452 92
Mast cell sarcoma is an extremely rare and aggressive type of mast cell disease. Only a few cases have been described so far, and little is known about the biology and phenotype of afflicted cells. We describe morphologic and immunophenotypic properties of neoplastic mast cells in a case of an intracranial mast cell sarcoma. In Wright-Giemsa-stained cytospin preparations, the morphology of dispersed cells appeared to be highly atypical with a considerable percentage of metachromatic blasts and mast cells with bilobed or multilobed nuclei. Combined toluidine blue/immunofluorescence staining revealed expression of CD13, CD45, CD88, CD116, and CD117 (c-
KIT
) on neoplastic mast cells. As assessed by immunohistochemistry, mast cells were immunoreactive for
tryptase
and CD68R, In contrast, the CD2 antigen that is expressed in mast cells in patients with indolent systemic mastocytosis was not detectable. Mast cells also failed to display the c-
KIT
mutation Asp-816-Val, which is typically found in systemic mast cell disorders. Together, neoplastic mast cells in a case of mast cell sarcoma were found to exhibit unique morphologic, phenotypical, and molecular features when compared with mast cells in indolent mastocytosis or normal tissue mast cells.
...
PMID:Morphologic and immunophenotypic properties of neoplastic cells in a case of mast cell sarcoma. 1282 96
Approximately 20% of patients with systemic mastocytosis (SM) have an associated haematological, clonal, non-mast cell lineage disease, and most exhibit an associated myelogenous neoplasm. This report describes a 48 year old man with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) and a type t(8;21) cytogenetic abnormality. Associated bone marrow mastocytosis (a defined subtype of SM) was only detected after successful polychemotherapy in the state of bone marrow aplasia, and persisted after complete remission of AML. The diagnosis of mastocytosis was based on the demonstration of a multifocal dense mastocytic infiltrate. The atypical mast cells showed prominent spindling and an aberrant immunophenotype, with coexpression of
tryptase
, chymase,
KIT
, and CD25-which is expressed only on neoplastic (not normal) mast cells. In addition, the transforming somatic mutation D816V of the c-kit gene was detected. Re-examination of the pretherapeutic (initial) bone marrow revealed a slight diffuse increase in partially spindle shaped mast cells also exhibiting an abnormal immunophenotype, with CD25 expression, although compact mastocytic infiltrates were not detected. Because the D816V mutation was detected in the initial bone marrow specimen, strict application of three minor diagnostic criteria (spindling, CD25, D816V) enabled a diagnosis of SM-AML to be confirmed retrospectively in the initial bone marrow tissue.
...
PMID:Acute myeloid leukaemia with t(8;21) associated with "occult" mastocytosis. Report of an unusual case and review of the literature. 1499 Jun 11
An association between mastocytosis and monoclonal gammopathy is a relatively rare but well recognized clinical finding. In the majority of cases, however, overt myeloma or lymphoma is not detectable morphologically. Here we describe the case of a 51 year-old male patient first presenting with paresis of the right facial nerve and the serological finding of IgM kappa paraproteinemia. The patient did not have organomegaly, lytic bone lesions, or urticaria pigmentosa-type skin lesions. Histological examination of a trephine biopsy specimen revealed the unusual coexistence of plasma cell myeloma and mastocytosis. Immunohistochemically, plasma cells were found to exhibit a monotypic staining for Ig heavy chain mu and Ig light chain kappa, thus confirming their neoplastic nature. Mast cells showed prominent spindling and formed dense multifocal infiltrates, thus enabling the diagnosis of bone marrow mastocytosis. Immunohistochemically, mast cells expressed
tryptase
, chymase, and
KIT
(CD117). In addition, aberrant expression of CD25 on mast cells was detected, confirming the coexistence of a neoplastic mast cell-proliferative disorder. According to the WHO proposal for classification of hematopoietic malignancies, this unique case, showing the association of two very rare haematologic neoplasms, can therefore best be referred to as bone marrow mastocytosis associated with IgM kappa plasma cell myeloma (SM-AHNMD).
...
PMID:Bone marrow mastocytosis associated with IgM kappa plasma cell myeloma. 1516 Sep 59
Cutaneous mast cell tumors (MCTs) are one of the most common tumors in dogs. Currently, prognostic and therapeutic determinations for MCTs are primarily based on the histologic grade of the tumor, but a vast majority of MCTs are of an intermediate grade, and the prognostic relevance is highly questioned. A more detailed prognostic evaluation, especially of grade 2 canine MCTs, is greatly needed. To evaluate the prognostic significance of
KIT
and
tryptase
expression patterns in canine cutaneous MCTs, we studied 100 cutaneous MCTs from 100 dogs that had been treated with surgery only. The total survival and disease-free survival time and the time to local or distant recurrence of MCTs were recorded for all dogs. Using immunohistochemistry, 98 of these MCTs were stained with anti-
KIT
and antitryptase antibodies. Three
KIT
- and three
tryptase
-staining patterns were identified. The
KIT
-staining patterns were identified as 1) membrane-associated staining, 2) focal to stippled cytoplasmic staining with decreased membrane-associated staining, and 3) diffuse cytoplasmic staining. The
tryptase
-staining patterns were identified as 1) diffuse cytoplasmic staining, 2) stippled cytoplasmic staining, and 3) little to no cytoplasmic staining. Based on univariate and multivariate survival analysis, increased cytoplasmic
KIT
staining was significantly associated with an increased rate of local recurrence and a decreased survival rate. The
tryptase
-staining patterns were not significantly associated with any survival parameter. On the basis of these results, we propose a new prognostic classification of canine cutaneous MCTs, according to their
KIT
-staining pattern, that can be used for the routine prognostic evaluation of canine cutaneous MCTs.
...
PMID:The use of KIT and tryptase expression patterns as prognostic tools for canine cutaneous mast cell tumors. 1523 37
The clinical spectrum of mast cell disease ranges from relatively innocuous and histologically subtle urticarial skin lesions to an aggressive and fatal leukemic form of mast cell proliferation. Not surprisingly, mast cell infiltrates may show significant microscopic heterogeneity, particularly in the bone marrow, the most common site of involvement in systemic mastocytosis (SM). Herein, 3 cases are presented to illustrate the clinical and morphologic heterogeneity of mast cell disease: the first patient, with long standing urticaria pigmentosa, developed anemia and thrombocytopenia; the second patient presented with a pathologic fracture; and the third patient was suspected to have refractory anemia. Upon bone marrow examination, all 3 patients showed mast cell infiltration with distinct morphologic features and all met the WHO criteria for aggressive systemic mastocytosis. Histochemical methods continue to play a role in the identification of mast cells, with some limitations depending on the degree of differentiation of the mast cells and tissue processing methods. Immunohistochemistry has contributed to the identification of mast cells. Coexpression of CD117 and CD25, as well as expression of the more specific immunohistochemical marker
tryptase
, is seen in systemic SM. The latter may also be employed as a serum marker in the diagnosis and follow-up of patients with SM. The mast cells, in the majority adults with SM, have somatic point mutations of
KIT
.
...
PMID:The faces of mast cell disease: bone marrow infiltrates in 3 patients with systemic mastocytosis. 1580 14
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