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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Large quantities of the low-molecular-weight natriuretic material (F4), which appears after the salts when fractionated on G-25 Sephadex column, were obtained from the urine of normal man on a normal diet. The natriuretic substance in F4 was (1) untrafiltrable through a membrane with a claimed molecular-weight cut-off of 500 daltons (Amicon UMO5); (2) soluble in more polar organic solvents; (3) totally soluble in 95% acetone when specific activity was doubled; (4) relatively resistant to heating at 100 degrees C for 1 hour at a pH of 10, and to heating at 110 degrees C in 6 N hydrochloric acid for up to 90 hours under anaerobic conditions, and treatment with nitrous acid; it was less resistant to these procedures when extracted into 95% acetone; (5) not destroyed by trypsin, chymotrypsin, pronase, pepsin, leucine aminopeptidase, and subtilysin, nor was it destroyed by pepsin, leucine aminopeptidase, subtilysin,
carboxypeptidase A
and B, and aminopeptidase M, or by
monoamine oxidase
, aryl sulphatase, and beta-glucuronidase when extracted into 95% acetone. The natriuretic substance in the 95% acetone-soluble F4 was totally destroyed by incubation with prolidase. The least amount of 95% acetone-soluble F4 required to produce a significant natriuresis in the bioassay rat was that derived from a 7-min sample of urine. The maximal response was obtained from a 30-min sample of urine. Continuous i.v. infusion of the 95% acetone-soluble F4 for 40 min produced a sustained natriuresis, whereas a greater amount injected as a bolus produced an effect which was not sustained beyond 20 min.
...
PMID:Further observations on a low-molecular-weight natriuretic substance in the urine of normal man. 4 87
The skin sites of the mouse where delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reactions are most easily elicited (foot pads and ears) are particularly rich in 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)-containing mast cells. Since mice are deficient in circulating basophils, which play a role in at least some DTH reactions, we investigated the possibility that the mast cells were playing an important role in the evolution of the skin reactions of DTH in mice. We found that reserpine, a drug which depletes mast cells of 5-HT, abolished the ability of the mouse to make DTH reactions in the skin. The suppressive effect of reserpine could be partially blocked by
monoamine oxidase
inhibitors which prevent the degradation of 5-HT in the cytosol of the
mast cell
. Spleen cells of immune, reserpine-treated mice transferred DTH reactions to nonimmune mice normally, indicating that the reserpine treatment did not affect immune T cells. DTH reactions could not be transferred into reserpine-treated mice. We suggest that T cells are continually emigrating from the blood, through postcapillary venule endothelium, by a mechanism which does not depend on vasoactive amines. If they are appropriately immune and meet the homologous antigen in the tissue, they induce mast cells to release vasoactive amines which cause postcapillary venule endothelial cells to separate, allowing the egress from the blood of cells which ordinarily do not recirculate. The secondarily arriving vasoactive amine-dependent cells are responsible for the micro- and macroscopic lesions of DTH reactions. Chemotactic factors may also be involved in bringing cells to the DTH reaction sites but we propose that T-cell regulation of vasoactive amine-containing cells allows the effector cells to pass through the endothelial gates after they are called.
...
PMID:Requirement for vasoactive amines for production of delayed-type hypersensitvity skin reactions. 116 73
Experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE), a T cell-mediated autoimmune disease can be transferred with lymphoid cells from actively immunized rats into naive recipients. In the mouse, previous studies have suggested a role for histamine/serotonin in the development of active EAE. We have found that myelin basic protein-reactive cells transfer a biphasic skin test response to naive rats analogous to what has been described in the mouse contact dermatitis system, where
mast cell
sensitization by Ag-specific T cell factors is required for the induction of skin test responses. Treatment of cell recipients with the serotonin receptor antagonists, cyproheptadine or methysergide, blocked or significantly reduced the development of EAE. Furthermore, it was found that treatment with cyproheptadine was effective in blocking clinical disease when administered day 3 to day 6 after cell transfer. In contrast, cyproheptadine treatments before induction of paralysis day 0 to 3, failed to alter the course of clinical disease. The inhibitor of
mast cell
degranulation, proxicromil, was also found to effectively block the elicitation of adoptively transferred EAE and was also found to be effective when administered just before the onset of clinical disease. Reserpine, a compound known to deplete mast cells of vasoactive amines by forcing granule contents into the cytoplasm where they are degraded by cell enzymes, was also effective in blocking both active and adoptively transferred EAE. Disease inhibition was found to be partially reversed with pargyline, an inhibitor of
monoamine oxidase
. In addition lymphocytes from treated animals were capable of transferring disease to naive recipients and appeared to have normal activity as assessed by Ag-or mitogen-driven proliferation in addition to IL-2 production.
...
PMID:The role of mast cells in the elicitation of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. 246 41
The involvement of mast cells in the elicitation of contact photosensitivity (CPS) was examined in mice treated with pharmacologic agents and in genetically
mast cell
-deficient W/Wv mice. Contact photosensitivity responses were diminished by pretreatment with reserpine, which may have been due to depletion of vasoactive amines in mast cells. This inhibition was almost reversed by the
monoamine oxidase
inhibitor, pargyline-HCl, which prevented reserpine-induced depletion of vasoactive amines such as serotonin. Defective CPS was also found in W/Wv mice, but not in their congenic littermates (+/+). Abnormal CPS in
mast cell
-deficient mice was due to a defect in the elicitation of CPS rather than a defect in the induction of effector T cells, since the ability to elicit CPS could be transferred to normal +/+ mice by photosensitized cells from
mast cell
-deficient mice. These findings favor the view that mast cells are involved in the elicitation of CPS.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of contact photosensitivity in mice. VII. Diminished elicitation by reserpine and defective expression in mast cell-deficient mice. 372 61
In the human adrenal cortex, serotonin (5-HT) is contained in mast-like cells, and we have shown that 5-HT stimulates aldosterone secretion, suggesting that 5-HT may control glomerulosa cells through a paracrine mechanism. Concurrently, the presence of 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid in human adrenocortical extracts indicates that 5-HT may be metabolized after local release by mast cells. The aim of the present study was to investigate in vitro the production and metabolism of 5-HT by the human adrenal cortex. Perifused adrenal slices released spontaneously detectable amounts of 5-HT (0.74 +/- 0.38 fmol/mg wet tissue.min). The
mast cell
-depleting drug compound 48/80 induced a burst of 5-HT secretion followed by a gradual increase in aldosterone production. Administration of the specific 5-HT(4) receptor antagonist GR 113808 (10(-6) M) did not affect compound 48/80-induced 5-HT release but abolished the stimulatory effect of compound 48/80 on aldosterone secretion, indicating that 5-HT released locally is responsible for a paracrine control of steroidogenesis. Incubation of cells from the human adrenal cortex with 5-HT (10(-5) M) provoked the formation of the 5-HT metabolite 5-hydroxytryptophol. The type A
monoamine oxidase
(
MAO
) inhibitor clorgyline (10(-6) M) suppressed the metabolism of 5-HT into 5-hydroxytryptophol. Immunocytochemical staining of cultured cells revealed the presence of a subpopulation of MAO-A-positive cells. Double labeling with an antiserum against chromogranin A showed that MAO-A was actually contained in chromaffin cells. Similarly, immunohistochemical staining of adrenal slices showed that MAO-A was expressed in chromaffin cells located both in the medulla and in intracortical rays. In conclusion, the present study shows that, in the human adrenal cortex, 5-HT, released by mast-cells, may stimulate aldosterone secretion in a paracrine manner. Our data also indicate that 5-HT is metabolized by MAO-A located in intracortical chromaffin cells.
...
PMID:Production and metabolism of serotonin (5-HT) by the human adrenal cortex: paracrine stimulation of aldosterone secretion by 5-HT. 1160 May 77