Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (mast cell)
14,925 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Six-week-old Sprague-Dawley female rats each infected with 40 Hymenolepis diminuta cysts showed increased mastocytosis from day 30 post-infection (p.i.) to day 47 p.i. Rats treated on day 40 p.i. with anthelmintic and autopsied 22 days later showed reduced mucosal mast cell (MMC) counts. Other infected rats, treated with anthelmintic on day 40, challenged with a 10 cysticercoid infection on day 47 and subsequently autopsied between day 8 and 19 post-challenge, maintained a high MMC count. Age of rats in this experiment was not a factor in mastocytosis.
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PMID:Mucosal mast cells in Sprague-Dawley rats infected with Hymenolepis diminuta tapeworms. 235 25

Biopsies of lesional and nonlesional skin from 14 patients with localized cutaneous or associated systemic mastocytosis were examined by ultrastructural and immunohistochemical techniques. Mast cells within lesions of the dermis were highly variable between patients with regard to cell number and extent of degranulation, although lesional sites consistently contained more mast cells than did nonlesional sites. Two mast cell patterns were identified based upon granule morphology. In biopsies from 8 patients, the majority of granules contained electron-dense amorphous zones; crystalline lattices; and indistinct, incomplete solid scrolls forming parallel lamellae. In biopsies from 6 patients, in addition to these granules, there were also granules composed of electron-dense amorphous zones, reticulated matrices, and/or distinct scrolls with lucent cores interrupted by dense spheres. The granule morphology for the first group (N = 8) was identical with that seen in the preponderant type of skin mast cell of 6 normal control subjects, whereas the granule morphology of the second group (N = 6) displayed an abnormal ultrastructural phenotype for skin that included granule types normally found not only in skin but also in intestinal lamina propria and lung. For individual patients, the patterns of granule ultrastructure were consistent between clinically nonlesional and lesional skin. A minority of cells in both patient groups appeared primitive ultrastructurally, exhibiting rudimentary, Golgi-associated progranules; monocyte-like morphologic characteristics; and mitotic activity. Moreover, when mast cells in lesional skin were screened for a limited panel of surface antigens, they displayed common patterns of reactivity (M718+, HLA-DR/DQ+, CD4+), and in a selected case, immunoelectron microscopy confirmed the presence of these antigens on mast cell plasma membranes. Dermal mast cells from normal donors (N = 6) lack these epitopes. These observations suggest that infiltrates in cutaneous mastocytosis may exhibit phenotypic characteristics not only of cutaneous mast cells, but in some patients also of mucosal mast cells. In either circumstance, the mast cells may display antigenic determinants common to monocyte/macrophages. Concordance of granule phenotype between lesional and clinically uninvolved skin of individual patients furthers the notion that even localized mastocytosis reflects covertly defective systemic mast cell homeostasis.
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PMID:Characterization of cellular dermal infiltrates in human cutaneous mastocytosis. 237

The records of 26 patients with systemic mast cell disease (SMCD) treated during the past decade at the National Institutes of Health were reviewed to determine the role of splenectomy in the management of SMCD. Seventeen (65%) patients had indolent SMCD, manifested primarily by urticaria pigmentosa and mast cell infiltration of the skin, bone marrow, or gastrointestinal tract. None of these patients underwent splenectomy. These patients required only symptomatic therapy. Nine (35%) patients, including those with associated hematologic disorders and those with a lymphoma-like illness termed lymphadenopathic mastocytosis with eosinophilia, had aggressive SMCD. Five of nine patients with aggressive SMCD underwent splenectomy. Of the five patients with splenectomy, three were alive at the time of this report, whereas none of the four who did not have a splenectomy was still alive. Length of survival without splenectomy was 26 months. With splenectomy, length of survival at the time of this report was 34 months. Patients without splenectomy died of bleeding caused by severe thrombocytopenia. Patients with splenectomy appeared better able to tolerate chemotherapy. We thus conclude that while splenectomy is of no value in the management of indolent mastocytosis, it should be considered in patients with aggressive SMCD.
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PMID:Splenectomy in the management of systemic mast cell disease. 240 52

Histiocytosis X and mastocytosis are proliferative processes that may have similar cutaneous manifestations. However, a positive Darier's sign (urtication on stroking of the lesion) is thought to reliably distinguish between these two diseases. We recently studied a 13-year-old girl with a 2-year history of extensive skin lesions and a positive Darier's sign. Routine histopathologic studies revealed a polymorphous cutaneous infiltrate composed of histiocytes, mast cells, eosinophils, and lymphoid cells. Electron microscopic studies demonstrated Langerhans granules in some of the histiocytes, and immunologic studies of frozen tissue showed that a significant subpopulation of the histiocytes marked as Langerhans cells. Giemsa staining of specimens from eight other cases of cutaneous histiocytosis X from our files revealed mast cells in all of the lesions, although none showed the abundance of mast cells present in the case with urtication. Our studies emphasize the often polymorphous nature of the cell population in cutaneous histiocytosis X and demonstrate that confusing clinical findings can result when the mast cell population in histiocytosis X produces urtication.
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PMID:Urticating histiocytosis: a mast cell-rich variant of histiocytosis X. 242 66

The mast cell distribution and number were studied in skin biopsies of 18 mastocytosis patients and 10 controls. The biopsies were stained for mast cells with toluidine blue at pH 0.5. The number in the upper dermis of lesional abdominal skin was at least twice as high as that of normal adjacent skin. Fixation in iso-osmotic 0.6% formaldehyde and 0.5% acetic acid, revealed more mast cells than conventional 4% formaldehyde fixation. Staining for 5 days, when compared to the normal for 30 min, increased the number of demonstrable mast cells just as did the change in fixation. Conventional formaldehyde fixation thus partially blocks the dye-binding of cutaneous mast cells, about 20% of the cells escaping detection. The degree of aldehyde blocking was similar in lesional and normal skin. A more pronounced blocking of dye-binding has been demonstrated previously in gut mucosal mast cells. Whether the blocking of dye-binding is an expression of heterogeneity in dermal mast cells remains to be determined.
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PMID:Dermal mast cells in mastocytosis: fixation, distribution and quantitation. 242 9

Thirty-five synovial fluid (SF) specimens were examined for the presence of mast cells and for their histamine content. Mast cells were seen in SF cells from 27 of 35 fluids, and histamine was measurable in 19 of 34. There was a strong correlation between mast cell number and histamine content. No consistent relationship was found between either the mast cell number or histamine level and the patients' diagnoses, except that the 2 patients with systemic mastocytosis had markedly elevated values for both SF mast cell number and histamine content. SF mast cells from one of the mastocytosis patients were studied for histamine release; significant amounts of histamine were released upon exposure to anti-human IgE, but not compound 48/80. Thus, mast cells similar to those present in connective tissue are frequently present in SF in numbers which correlate with SF histamine levels. These mast cells contain active proteases and are capable of degranulation. Mast cells were consistently present in large numbers in the SF of patients with systemic mastocytosis, but their numbers were highly variable in fluids of patients with other diseases.
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PMID:Mast cell numbers and histamine levels in synovial fluids from patients with diverse arthritides. 242 93

Inflammatory or allergic conditions, as well as situations where healing and repair processes occur, are characterized by the presence of increased numbers of mast cells. Previous work on the effect of neuropeptides on mast cell mediator release showed that only substance P caused such release from intestinal mucosal mast cells [Shanahan, F., Denburg, J. A., Fox, J., Bienenstock, J. & Befus, A. D. (1985) J. Immunol. 135, 1331-1337]. Accordingly, we investigated the microanatomical relationship between mast cells and enteric nerves in normal rat intestine and parasite-infected rat intestine, in which mucosal mast cell hyperplasia occurs. Combined immunohistochemistry for neuron-specific enolase and staining with alcian blue at pH 0.5 was employed on paraffin-embedded sections of normal and Nippostrongylus brasiliensis-infected rat jejunum. Sixty-seven percent of intestinal mucosal mast cells were touching subepithelial nerves, and an additional 20% were within 2 micron of nerves. Assessment of the proportion of the lamina propria occupied by mast cells (12.5%), the average mast cell area (121 +/- 28 microns 2), and the density of enteric nerves (one per 788 +/- 151 microns 2) suggested that the association was 5 times greater than would be expected by chance alone (P less than 0.0001). In consecutive sections, the nerves in contact with mast cells were also shown to contain substance P and/or calcitonin-gene-related peptide. Electron microscopy confirmed this association: 8% of the mast cells in infected rats exhibited membrane-membrane contact with unmyelinated axons containing 70- to 170-nm dense-core vesicles, and an additional 31% were situated less than 250 nm from nerves. Other mast cells appeared to embrace nerve bundles through the projection of lamellopodia. These data provide systematic quantitative evidence that a structural foundation for communication between the immune and nervous systems exists in the rat gastrointestinal tract.
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PMID:Intestinal mucosal mast cells in normal and nematode-infected rat intestines are in intimate contact with peptidergic nerves. 243 89

Mastocytosis, a disease that varies in its clinical presentation, is usually documented by histologic examination of lesional skin. However, no universally accepted histopathologic criteria exist for establishing the diagnosis of this disease. We have combined the method of morphometric point counting with the mast cell-specific stain, conjugated avidin, to accurately quantify mast cells in cutaneous tissue sections of mastocytosis. Using this histologic approach, we found that macules, papules, and nodules of mast cell disease had from ninefold to nearly a 160-fold greater mast cell content than was observed in normal skin and in several other cutaneous disorders. This technique also permitted the objective histologic stratification of mastocytosis skin lesions according to their mast cell density. Morphometric point counting in conjunction with conjugated avidin offers a simple and accurate method for establishing the diagnosis of mastocytosis.
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PMID:Diagnosis of mastocytosis subsets using a morphometric point counting technique. 244 79

Our studies have clearly shown that neuropeptides have a profound effect on immunoglobulin synthesis both in vivo and in vitro. The effects varied according to the neuropeptide added or the tissue from which the lymphocytes were obtained. Substance P caused the most pronounced enhancement of both functions, especially in Peyer's patch cells, where it selectively increased IgA synthesis. Somatostatin was inhibitory, and the effect of vasoactive intestinal peptide varied according to the source of the cells. We have previously shown that neuropeptides also cause mast cell secretion and that only substance P was effective in this regard on intestinal mucosal mast cells. Therefore, we looked for microanatomic relationships between peptidergic nerves and immune effector cells. Mast cells appear to have structural associations with neuropeptides-containing nerves in the intestine. Nerve growth factor, known to promote the growth of sensory afferent and sympathetic nerves, has significant direct effects on mast cells. In vitro, this substance caused enhanced antigen mediated histamine release and, in vivo, extensive mast cell hyperplasia. Also, in humans, we were able to produce increased numbers of mast cell/basophil colonies from peripheral blood in the presence of nerve growth factor.
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PMID:Neuropeptides and immunity. 244 42

Immunotoxins--toxins covalently conjugated to specific antibodies--have been studied as possible agents in the treatment of cancer. The avid binding of IgE antibodies to FcR on mast cells and basophils suggested the possible use of an IgE-immunotoxin in the treatment of malignant mastocytosis or as a method to generate mast cell-depleted animals for study. To this end, the effect of a covalent conjugate of rat myeloma IgE and ricin A chain on rat cutaneous mast cells was examined in vivo. IgE-ricin A chain was capable of binding to and sensitizing cutaneous mast cells in vivo as indicated by a bluing response to intracutaneous anti-ricin A chain. IgE-ricin A chain, given either as a single dose or, even more effectively, as two split doses, significantly reduced cutaneous histamine content for 6 to 8 days. Neither a mixture of IgE and ricin A chain that were not conjugated nor the induction of cutaneous mast cell degranulation with anti-IgE affected cutaneous histamine levels. Therefore, IgE-ricin A chain produces a prolonged depletion of cutaneous histamine levels.
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PMID:IgE immunotoxins. Effect of an IgE-ricin A chain conjugate on rat skin histamine content. 244 77


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