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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
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We have previously shown the development in vitro of tryptase+ human mast cells from fetal liver cells cocultured with murine 3T3 fibroblasts. In this study, recombinant human stem cell factor (rhuSCF), the ligand for the c-kit proto-oncogene product called Kit, stimulated the growth and differentiation primarily of mast cells from dispersed fetal liver cells, whereas recombinant human interleukin-3 (rhuIL-3) stimulated the differentiation of basophils along with other cell types. Cultures of fetal liver cells were initiated and maintained in the presence of rhuSCF or rhuIL-3 for up to 6 weeks. Metachromatic cells in cytospins were identified as mast cells primarily on the basis of tryptase expression, and as MCT or MCTC by immunohistochemistry using monoclonal antibodies against tryptase and chymase, whereas basophils were metachromatic, polymorphonuclear, and lacked these proteases. Levels of tryptase and histamine were measured by radioimmunoassay, tryptase and chymase activities by peptide hydrolysis, and cell surface Kit by flow cytometry with the monoclonal antibody YB5.B8. The predominant presence of mast cells occurred only in the cultures supplemented with rhuSCF. The percentage and total number of mast cells increased over time with increasing concentrations of rhuSCF and reached a plateau at 55 ng/mL. At this concentration of rhuSCF, mast cells first appeared by day 7; by day 42, 106% of the starting number of cells were present and 85% of these were tryptase+, 31% being weakly chymase+. These mast cells appeared immature by ultrastructural criteria; most cells were mononuclear, but some had nuclei with deeply divided lobes. DNA synthesis in tryptase+ mast cells at days 21 and 28 of culture with rhuSCF was demonstrated by incorporation of bromodeoxyuridine. Calculated levels of histamine (1.2 pg/mast cell) and tryptase (0.9 pg/mast cell) were similar to those determined previously in coculture experiments with murine 3T3 fibroblasts. Chymase activity was undetectable in most cell extracts. On day 0, 4% to 20% of fetal liver cells expressed cell surface Kit. In the presence of rhuSCF, the percentages and total numbers of Kit+ cells and the apparent concentration of Kit per cell increased along with the number of tryptase+ cells. In the presence of rhuIL-3, toluidine blue+, tryptase- cells first and maximally appeared at day 14 (11% +/- 2.5%). The percentage of these toluidine blue+ cells then declined to about 6% by days 21 and 35, while the total number of positive cells declined over 10-fold. Kit+ cells in the presence of rhuIL-3 declined from 9% on day 3 to 2% on day 35.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Recombinant human stem cell factor stimulates differentiation of mast cells from dispersed human fetal liver cells. 128 84

Hemopoietic stem cell factor (SCF), which is the ligand for the proto-oncogene c-kit receptor (allelic with W locus) and the product of Sl locus of the mouse, has recently been cloned. The human homologue has also been cloned, and recombinant protein (human rSCF) expressed and purified to homogeneity. To determine the effect of human rSCF in the presence or absence of human rIL-3 on human bone marrow-derived mast cells and basophils, human CD34+ pluripotent progenitor cells, highly enriched (greater than 99%) from bone marrow mononuclear cells, were cultured over agarose surfaces (interphase cultures) in the presence of human rIL-3, human rIL-3 and increasing concentrations of human rSCF, or human rSCF alone. Over 3 to 4 wk, human rSCF acted synergistically with human rIL-3 at all concentrations, producing a three- to fivefold increase in total, mast cell, and basophil numbers over human rIL-3 alone when used at 100 ng/ml. The percentage of cell types in the human rIL-3 and human rIL-3 plus human rSCF cultures, however, remained the same, with basophils constituting 18 to 35% of the final cultured cells, and mast cells 3% or less of the final cell number. In the presence of human rSCF alone, the combined total percentage of mast cells and basophils was 0 to 1.0%, the majority of cells being macrophages. Mast cells cultured in human rIL-3 plus human rSCF, but not human rIL-3 alone, were berberine sulfate positive, suggesting the presence of heparin proteoglycans within granules. Electron microscopic examination of cultures supplemented with human rIL-3 and rSCF, but not human rIL-3 alone, revealed that after 3 wk in culture, mast cell granules contained tryptase and exhibited scroll, reticular, and homogeneous patterns as seen previously in CD34+/3T3 fibroblast cocultures. Thus, CD34+ cells cultured in the presence of both human rIL-3 and rSCF give rise to cultures containing increased numbers of basophils and mast cells, with the mast cells by ultrastructural studies showing evidence of maturation although the percentages of basophils and mast cells arising in these cultures remained unchanged.
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PMID:Effect of IL-3 and stem cell factor on the appearance of human basophils and mast cells from CD34+ pluripotent progenitor cells. 137 May 17

In the murine system, a number of cytokines (including interleukin-3 [IL-3], IL-4, and stem cell factor [SCF]) promote the growth of mast cells (MCs). However, so far little is known about factors controlling differentiation of human MCs. Recent data suggest that human MCs express receptors (R) for SCF. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether recombinant human (rh) SCF induces differentiation of human MCs from their precursor cells. For this purpose, bone marrow (BM; normal donors, n = 6) and peripheral blood (PB; normal donors, n = 11) mononuclear cells (MNC) were cultured in the presence of rhSCF, rhIL-3, rhIL-4, rhIL-9, recombinant human macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhM-CSF), or control medium in long-term (8 weeks) suspension cultures. After 4 weeks, up to 5% of the MNC (BM and PB) cultured in the presence of rhSCF, but not in the presence of other cytokines, were found to exhibit the characteristics of MCs. These MCs expressed the YB5.B8-reactive domain of the SCF R as well as IgE R, as determined by combined toluidine blue/immunofluorescence staining. Myeloid antigens, likewise expressed on human basophils (ie, CD11b, CDw65, and Bsp-1), could not be detected on these cells. Furthermore, rhSCF, but not rhIL-3, rhIL-4, rhIL-9, or rhM-CSF, induced dose- and time-dependent increases in the formation of cellular tryptase (an MC-specific enzyme) (rhSCF [100 ng/mL], 1,308 +/- 679 ng/mL v control medium, 18 +/- 6 ng/mL tryptase on day 35 of PB cell cultures), as well as an increase in cellular histamine. After 6 to 8 weeks, when other mature hematopoietic cells decreased, MCs still could be detected in culture, with up to 40% of all cells being MCs. To test whether rhSCF also activates tissue MCs, we performed histamine release experiments (dispersed tissue; lung, n = 3; uterus, n = 3). SCF was found to enhance (by up to 3.4-fold) the capacity of the MCs to release histamine upon cross-linkage of IgE R with anti-IgE. Together, these observations suggest that rhSCF induces in vitro differentiation of human MCs from their BM and PB precursor cells in long-term culture and upregulates MC releasability.
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PMID:Induction of differentiation of human mast cells from bone marrow and peripheral blood mononuclear cells by recombinant human stem cell factor/kit-ligand in long-term culture. 138 99

Stem cell factor (SCF) isolated from culture medium conditioned by Buffalo rat liver cells was subjected to detailed structural analysis. Attempts at direct N-terminal sequencing of the factor indicated that its N terminus is blocked as pyroglutamic acid (Zsebo, K. M., Wypych, J., McNiece, I. K., Lu, H. S., Smith, K. A., Karkare, S. B., Sachdev, R. K., Yuschenkoff, V. N., Birkett, N. C., Williams, L. R., Satyagal, V. N., Bosselman, R. A., Mendiaz, E. A., and Langley, K. E. (1990) Cell 63, 195-201). The removal of the blocking pyroglutamate by pyroglutamate aminopeptidase allowed sequencing of the polypeptide chain to position 47. Stem cell factor was also digested with CNBr, trypsin, Staphylococcus aureus protease (strain V8), and AspN peptidase to generate different sets of peptides that were then separated by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and sequenced. Sequence of an internal peptide fragment obtained by cleavage of stem cell factor at a single tryptophanyl peptide bond was also obtained. From these analyses, the complete amino acid sequence could be constructed. The factor as isolated is a single polypeptide of 164 or 165 amino acids. The sequence is confirmatory to a sequence deduced from a cDNA sequence and provides important evidence for C-terminal processing of the polypeptide encoded by cDNA. There are four potential N-linked glycosylation sites. Asn65, Asn72, Asn109, and Asn120. Sequence determination of isolated peptides suggested that Asn120 is glycosylated, Asn65 and Asn109 glycosylated in some molecules but not in others, and Asn72 not glycosylated. Amino acids at three positions, i.e. 142, 143, and 155, could not be detected during sequence analysis. Since the gene sequence codes for Ser, Thr, and Thr at these positions (Martin, F. H., Suggs, S. V., Langley, K. E., Lu, H. S., Ting, J., Okino, K. H., Morris, C. F., McNiece, I. K., Jacobsen, F. W., Mendiaz, E. A., Birkett, N. C., Smith, K. C., Johnson, M. J., Parker, V. P., Flores, J. C., Patel, A. C., Fisher, E. F., Erjavec, H. O., Herrera, C. J., Wypych, J., Sachdev, R. K., Pope, J. A., Leslie, I., Wen, D., Lin, C. W., Cupples, R. L., and Zsebo, K. M. (1990) Cell 63, 203-211), they could be sites of O-linked carbohydrate attachment. The four cysteines form two intramolecular disulfide bonds, Cys4-Cys89 and Cys43-Cys138.
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PMID:Amino acid sequence and post-translational modification of stem cell factor isolated from buffalo rat liver cell-conditioned medium. 170 71

Although interleukin-4 (IL-4) in mice is known to augment the proliferation of mast cells and to modulate the expression of certain mast cell protease transcripts, its effect on human mast cells is less well understood. The current study examined the effects of recombinant human IL-4 (rhuIL-4) on stem cell factor (SCF)-dependent fetal liver-derived human mast cells in liquid culture. In no case did rhuIL-4 augment proliferation of mast cells. rhuIL-4 selectively inhibited certain aspects of the development of mast cells in cultures of fetal liver cells with rhuSCF. These include lower numbers and percentages of cells expressing tryptase and surface Kit, smaller cells, and lower contents of cells for tryptase, histamine, and Kit. Development of metachromasia was not attenuated. The downregulation of Kit, the surface receptor for SCF, is probably a critical factor, because cells lacking this molecule would not be able to respond to SCF. In contrast to mast cell progenitors, mast cells already developed in vitro from fetal liver cells are relatively resistant to rhuIL-4, but are still dependent for survival on the presence of rhuSCF.
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PMID:Interleukin-4 inhibits the expression of Kit and tryptase during stem cell factor-dependent development of human mast cells from fetal liver cells. 752 Jul 76

Mast cells may be cultured from human peripheral blood in the presence of recombinant human stem cell factor (rhSCF). The characteristics of the cells in peripheral blood that give rise to mast cells are unknown. Because mast cell precursors in human marrow are CD34+, human peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with mastocytosis and normal controls were sorted on the basis of CD34 expression and the positive and negative cell populations were cultured in rhSCF, recombinant human interleukin-3 (rhIL-3), or both for 6 weeks. Cell cultures were examined every 2 weeks for total and mast cell number and cell differential using Wright Giemsa and acid toluidine blue stains and antibodies to mast cell tryptase and chymase, cell-associated histamine, and expression of CD34, c-kit, Fc epsilon RI, and Fc gamma RII using flow cytometric analysis. The ultrastructural anatomy of mast cells was examined by electron microscopy. Peripheral blood CD34+ cells cultured in rhSCF with or without rhIL-3 gave rise to cell cultures consisting of greater than 80% mast cells by 6 weeks. CD34+ cells cultured in rhIL-3 alone did not give rise to mast cells, whereas rhIL-3 plus rhSCF increased the final mast cell number eightfold when compared with cells cultured in rhSCF alone. Mast cells increased concomitantly with a decrease in large undifferentiated mononuclear cells. CD34- cells did not give rise to mast cells. Histamine content per cell at 6 weeks was approximately 5 pg. Electron microscopy of 4-week cultures showed immature mast cells containing predominantly tryptase-positive granules that were either homogeneous or contained lattice structures, partial scroll patterns, or central dense cores and mixtures of vesicles, fine granular material, and particles. The CD34+ population at day 0 expressed Kit (65%) and Fc gamma RII (95%), but not Fc epsilon RI, by fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis. At 6 weeks, CD34+-derived mast cells exhibited Fc epsilon RI in addition to Kit and Fc gamma RII, and were negative for CD34 antigen. Patients with mastocytosis showed a higher number of mast cells per CD34+ cell cultured compared with normal controls. Thus, the mast cell precursor in human peripheral blood is CD34+/Fc epsilon RI- and gives rise to mast cells in the presence of rhSCF with or without rhIL-3, and the number of mast cells arising per CD34+ cell in culture is greater when the CD34+ cells are obtained from patients with mastocytosis compared with normal subjects.
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PMID:Mast cells cultured from the peripheral blood of normal donors and patients with mastocytosis originate from a CD34+/Fc epsilon RI- cell population. 752 30

In murines, interleukins (IL) 3, 4, 9, and 10, nerve growth factor, and stem cell factor induce or promote growth and differentiation of mast cells (MC). Increased stimulation and synergy was observed when combinations of cytokines were used. In man, no growth factor for human MCs had been identified until recently, when SCF was found to induce in vitro growth and differentiation of human MCs. In the present study, the effects of recombinant human IL-3 and IL-4 on SCF-dependent differentiation of human MCs from their circulating progenitor cells in long-term culture were analyzed. Surprisingly, both IL-3 and IL-4 were found to inhibit SCF-dependent formation of human MCs (SCF, 100 ng/ml: 36.4 +/- 18.7 x 10(3)/ml; SCF + IL-3, 100 U/ml: 23.4 +/- 4.2 x 10(3)/ml; SCF + IL-4, 100 U/ml: 7.4 +/- 4.4 x 10(3)/ml) and synthesis of MC tryptase (SCF, 100 ng/ml: 73.2 +/- 17.6 ng/ml; SCF + IL-3, 100 U/ml: 10.8 +/- 3.1 ng/ml [p < 0.01]; SCF + IL-4, 100 U/ml: 8.1 +/- 1.5 ng/ml, [p = 0.02]). The inhibitory effects of these cytokines on SCF-dependent formation of human MCs were associated with an increase in the number of macrophages (IL-3) or lymphocytes (IL-4) in the same cultures and may be due to competitive recruitment of cells from a pool of multilineage hematopoietic progenitor cells.
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PMID:Inhibition of stem cell factor dependent formation of human mast cells by interleukin-3 and interleukin-4. 752 90

We have isolated and characterized the human cardiac mast cell (CMC) and compared this novel mast cell (MC type with MC obtained from uterus, skin, and lung. Heart tissue was obtained from 14 patients with cardiomyopathy (CMP, heart transplantation). CMC were isolated by enzymatic digestion using collagenase, pronase-E, hyaluronidase, and DNAse. Substantial amounts of CMC (0.5% to 1.5% of isolated cells) were found in the atrial appendages but not in ventricular digests or other sites of the heart (< 0.1%). In situ staining of atrial tissue revealed the presence of CMC in the myocardium (2.16 +/- 0.7 MC/mm2), endocardium (2.24 +/- 0.9 MC/mm2), and epicardium. As assessed by combined toluidine blue/immunofluorescence staining with monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs), isolated CMC expressed surface IgE, the receptor for stem cell factor (c-kit receptor/CD117), the p24 antigen (CD9), the Pgp-1 homing receptor (CD44), the pan leukocyte antigen (CD45), and the ICAM-1 antigen (CD54). CMC were not recognized by MoAbs to lymphocyte function associated antigen 2 (LFA-2; CD2), T-cell receptor (TcR; CD3), T4 antigen (CD4), LFA-1 alpha-chain (CD11a), C3biR alpha-chain (CD11b), CR4 alpha-chain (CD11c), LPS-R related Ag (CD14), 3-FAL/x-hapten (CD15), Fc gamma RIII (CD16), lactosylceramid (CDw17), the B-cell antigen CD19, or CR1 (CD35). In situ expression of leukocyte antigens on CMC was demonstrable by indirect immunoperoxidase staining technique and double-labeling immunohistochemistry. Almost all CMC (90%) reacted with MoAbs against tryptase and chymase and thus were MCTC. Cardiac mast cells were also stained by the heparin-binding dye Berberine sulfate and expressed measurable amounts of histamine (4.6 +/- 1.4 pg per cell). Cross linking of either IgE receptor or SCF receptor (c-kit) on CMC resulted in histamine secretion (non-specific release: < 6% of total histamine, alpha IgE induced: 12% to 52%; SCF-induced release: 9% to 18%), whereas neither substance P (a skin MC agonist) nor the basophil agonist FMLP showed an effect on CMC. Together, the CMC is an MCTC primarily located in the appendage of the atrium. This novel type of MC exhibits surface membrane antigen and functional properties similar to those of lung and uterus MC.
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PMID:The human cardiac mast cell: localization, isolation, phenotype, and functional characterization. 752 50

In order to evaluate various markers for human mast cells, two human mast/basophilic cell lines (HMC-1/KU812), cultured mast cells from the peripheral blood monocytic fraction and peripheral blood monocytes were compared with mast cells in tissue sections from normal skin, using histochemistry, enzyme histochemistry and immunohistochemistry. All reagents stained normal skin mast cells, with toluidine blue, tryptase reactivity and antibodies against the Fc epsilon RI and the stem cell factor receptor (c-kit) being most active. The cell lines and mast cells cultured from peripheral blood were negative for avidin, safranin and chymase, strongly positive for c-kit and variably reactive with all other reagents. All antibodies except AA1 against tryptase also stained one or several epidermal and dermal cell types or blood monocytes. Histochemical stains (toluidine blue, avidin) and reagents for the enzymes tryptase and chymase are thus specific markers for mast cells. The frequent reactivity of antibodies against mast cells with other cell types indicates interesting functional and ontogenetic relationships between these cells.
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PMID:Phenotypic evaluation of cultured human mast and basophilic cells and of normal human skin mast cells. 752 79

We have isolated, partially purified, and characterized the mast cells from human heart tissue. The histamine content of left and right ventricles and septum of hearts obtained from 25 patients undergoing heart transplantation was 5.4 +/- 0.6, 5.3 +/- 0.5, and 5.6 +/- 0.5 micrograms/g of wet tissue, respectively. Ultrastructural study of cardiac mast cells revealed scroll, crystal, and mixed granules, homogeneously dense granules, and lipid bodies in the cytoplasm. A mild collagenase digestion was used to disperse the heart mast cells; the average yield was 3.2 +/- 0.6% (range: 0.8 to 13.6%). The average histamine and tryptase content/heart mast cells was 3.3 +/- 0.2 pg (n = 25) and 24.2 +/- 4.3 micrograms/10(6) cells (n = 11), respectively. Survival of cardiac mast cells after overnight culture was 71.9 +/- 5.4% (n = 23). The purification of human heart mast cells can be brought from less than 0.1 to 12% by a combination of low-speed centrifugation over albumin (2%) solution and Percoll gradient. Viability as shown by trypan blue exclusion was greater than 90%. Heart mast cells released histamine in response to immunologic (anti-IgE, anti-Fc epsilon RI, and C5a) and nonimmunologic stimuli (recombinant human stem cell factor, A23187, and compound 48/80) but did not respond to substance P, FMLP, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate, or acetylcholine. There was a linear correlation between the percentage of release caused by anti-IgE and anti-Fc epsilon RI, whereas there was no correlation between the release caused by C5a and anti-IgE-mediated stimuli. Cross-linking with anti-IgE of IgE on heart mast cells induced the release of tryptase (10.1 +/- 2.1 micrograms/10(7) cells; n = 10) and the de novo synthesis of PGD2 (17.3 +/- 4.3 ng/10(6) cells; n = 10) and of leukotriene C4 (19.1 +/- 4.5 ng/10(6) cells; n = 10). There was a linear correlation between the percentage of histamine secretion and tryptase release (r = 0.67; p < 0.001) induced by cross-linking of Fc epsilon RI. similarly, there was a significant correlation between percentage of histamine secretion and PGD2 (r = 0.63; p < 0.001) and LTC4 (r = 0.64; p < 0.001) release. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated the presence of chymase in cardiac mast cells. Mast cells isolated from human heart can be a useful model with which to study the role of these cells and their mediators in cardiac anaphylaxis and cardiovascular diseases.
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PMID:Human heart mast cells. Isolation, purification, ultrastructure, and immunologic characterization. 753 85


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