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)

The net percentage of release of arylsulfatase activity from purified rat mast cells induced by rabbit anti-rat F(ab')2 was consistently only about 1/3 that of histamine. Isoelectric focusing of the released and residual arylsulfatase activities demonstrated specific release of the A type without B and a net percentage of immunologic release of arylsulfatase A equivalent to that of histamine. When the net percentage of histamine and arylsulfatase A release were nearly maximal (88 and 76%) in response to the calcium ionophore A23187, specific release of arylsulfatase B did not occur. Thus, arylsulfatase A and not B was associated with the secretory granule released from the rat mast cell by reversed anaphylaxis or the calcium ionophore. In contrast, subcellular fractionation of water-lysed mast cells yielded arylsulfatase B with the heparin- and chymase-containing granule fraction and arylsulfatase A in the aqueous fraction comprised of cell sap and granule water eluate. It may be that arylsulfatase B resides in a minor second granule, whereas arylsulfatase A is loosely associated with the predominant secretory granule of the rat mast cell.
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PMID:Release of arylsulfatase A but not B from rat mast cells by noncytolytic secretory stimuli. 8 Dec 31

Rat mast cell granules contain a spectrum of enzymes as established by histochemical techniques and subcellular fractionation. However, 35% of the beta-glucuronidase, 30% of the beta-D-galactosidase, 14% of the beta-hexosaminidase and all of the acid phosphatase is not available for immunologic release from purified rat serosal mast cells, suggesting the presence of nonsecretory lysosomes containing these acid hydrolases. On the other hand, immunologic release of the majority of chymase, beta-hexosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, beta-D-galactosidase, and arylsulfatase A occurs in parallel with histamine and thereby localizes these substances to the rat mast cell secretory granule. A molecular model of the secretory granule in the resting mast cell can now be constructed in which heparin proteoglycan is the granule matrix to which chymase and probably other proteins are ionically bound. Inhibition of chymase by serotonin stored in its active site and of chymase and acid hydrolases by their interaction with heparin probably occurs. Histamine is stored by ionic linkage to carboxyl groups of protein and heparin. Micromolar amounts of heparin glycosaminoglycans, histamine, serotonin, chymase, beta-D-hexosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, and arylsulfatase A in secretory granules of 10(6) mast cells are 0.7--1.3 x 10(-3), 70--220 x 10(-3), 0.9--28 x 10(-3), 0.2--0.5 x 10(-3), 0.9--2.7 x 10(-6), 0.1--0.3 x 10(-6) and less than 8 x 10(-6), respectively. In addition, the total protein available for calcium ionophore-induced release from 10(6) rat mast cells is about 60 microgram, indicating that less than 50% of the granule protein can be accounted for. Recognition that mast cell secretory granules contain acid hydrolases indicates that they are modified lysosomes; their special intracellular and extracellular functions are dictated by the associated novel constituents and the stimulus for activation.
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PMID:Enzymes of the mast cell granule. 677 34