Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a recent series of experiments, we observed that epidermal Langerhans cells (LC) of healthy, non-atopic individuals have the capacity of specifically binding monomeric serum or myeloma IgE. IgE-binding to LC could neither be prevented by pre-incubation of the cryostat sections with monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) against either Fc epsilon RII/CD23 or Fc gamma RII/CD32 nor by the addition of excess amounts of lactose, but could be entirely abrogated by pre-incubation with the anti-Fc epsilon RI MoAb 15-1. A direct testing of the anti-Fc epsilon RI MoAb 15-1 and 19-1 on cryostat sections in an indirect immuno-double-labeling technique showed that, in contrast to eight different anti-Fc epsilon RII/CD23 MoAb, these MoAb react with the majority of CD1a-bearing epidermal cells. At an ultrastructural level, 15-1 immunogold-labeling in the epidermis was confined to the surface of cells exhibiting Birbeck granules. In further experiments, we were able to amplify by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology transcripts for the alpha, beta, and gamma chains of Fc epsilon RI from LC-enriched epidermal cells and dermal cells, but not from LC-depleted epidermal cells. Transcripts for the
mast cell
enzyme
tryptase
were exclusively found in dermal cell-derived RNA preparations, thus excluding a contamination of the LC-enriched epidermal cell preparations by dermal mast cells. Collectively, these data show that epidermal LC, but not other epidermal cells, express Fc epsilon RI molecules.
...
PMID:Fc epsilon RI mediates IgE binding to human epidermal Langerhans cells. 143 Dec 5
A gene that encodes mouse mast cell protease (mMCP) 7 (also known as mouse mast cell tryptase 2) was isolated by genomic cloning with a cDNA that encodes mMCP-6, a
tryptase
in serosal mast cells. cDNAs encoding mMCP-7 were isolated from a bone-marrow-derived
mast cell
cDNA library. The mMCP-7 gene spans 2.3 kilobases and contains five exons rather than six, as found in the mMCP-6 and human mast cell tryptase I genes. Comparison of the 5' end of the transcript with the genomic sequence indicated that the region corresponding to the first intron in the mMCP-6 and human tryptase I genes is not spliced during transcription of mMCP-7 mRNA because of a point mutation at the intron 1 acceptor splice site; this results in a 5' untranslated region of 195 nucleotides, which is longer than that of any other known
mast cell
-specific transcript. mMCP-7 is 71-76% homologous with mMCP-6 and with dog and human
mast cell
tryptases, and it is the most acidic mast cell protease, with an overall net charge of -10. RNA blot analyses revealed that the mMCP-7 gene is transcribed in bone-marrow-derived mast cells but is not transcribed in mature serosal mast cells or in mucosal
mast cell
-enriched intestinal tissue of Trichinella spiralis-infected mice. Transcription of the mMCP-7 gene by differentiating bone-marrow-derived mast cells occurred within 1 week of bone-marrow culture but decreased dramatically after 3 weeks. Thus, the mMCP-7 gene displays a number of unusual structural characteristics and is distinctive in its transient and selective expression in immature mast cells maintained in interleukin 3-enriched medium.
...
PMID:Isolation, characterization, and transcription of the gene encoding mouse mast cell protease 7. 145 96
This study examined plasma exudation into the bronchial lumen after allergen challenge. A novel low-trauma technique was developed to challenge and lavage a medium-sized lingular or middle lobe bronchus. Eleven subjects with challenge-assessed pollen-sensitive asthma were allocated to fiberbronchoscopy in the supine position. In the control bronchus 0.5 ml diluent was instilled. The bronchus was occluded proximally 3 min later by inflation of a balloon, and lavage was carried out twice with 25 ml saline. Incremental doses of allergen solution (0.5 ml) were then instilled in the contralateral lung. The challenge continued until a clearly visible bronchial reaction occurred and was immediately followed by the same lavage as on the control side. The lavage liquids were analyzed for the presence of plasma exudation and
mast cell
activation indices. On the allergen-challenged side,
tryptase
, reflecting
mast cell
activation, was increased by 150% (p < 0.01) compared with the control side. Fibrinogen (mol wt 340,000), reflecting large protein exudation, was increased by 840% (p < 0.05), and N-alpha-tosyl-L-arginine-methyl esterase activity, reflecting both large protein exudation and
mast cell
activation, increased by 480% (p < 0.01). The level of albumin (mol wt 69,000), the major luminal protein under baseline conditions, increased but not significantly. We conclude that activation of mast cells and luminal entry of little sieved plasma exudates occur early after endobronchial allergen provocation in human subjects with allergic asthma.
...
PMID:Bronchial exudation of bulk plasma at allergen challenge in allergic asthma. 145 71
Bovine
tryptase
, a
mast cell
trypsin
-like protease, was isolated from liver capsula and from mast cells obtained from the same tissue. The purification procedure which leads to an increase in
tryptase
activity of 850 fold, involves high salt extraction, hydrophobic interaction chromatography on octyl-Sepharose and affinity chromatography on heparin-Sepharose. The enzyme is oligomeric, with an apparent M(r) of 360,000 +/- 40,000 (as obtained by gel filtration in high salt). The constituent subunits with M(r) 39,000 and 41,000 Da are both labeled with [3H] diisopropyl fluorophosphate and cross-react with anti-rat
tryptase
immunoglobulins. Only a single N-terminal sequence was found, identical to that of human, dog and rat tryptases. Tripeptide fluorogenic substrates with basic residues in P1 and P2 positions are preferentially hydrolyzed by this enzyme, suggesting a possible processing role as proposed for other tryptases. Bovine
tryptase
activity is inhibited by NaCl and is insensitive to high molecular weight inhibitors, such as alpha 1 antitrypsin and soybean trypsin inhibitor, as for human and dog tryptases. However it is inhibited by low molecular weight serine protease inhibitors and, similarly to rat
tryptase
, by the bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI or aprotinin), in a pH dependent fashion.
...
PMID:Bovine tryptase: purification and characterization. 151 79
The immunohistology of the nasal mucosa was examined in 13 grass pollen-sensitive patients and in seven normal nonatopic control subjects before and during the pollen season. Cryostat sections (6 microns) of biopsy specimens from the inferior turbinate were immunostained with the alkaline-phosphatase antialkaline-phosphatase method and a panel of monoclonal antibodies. Mast cell subtypes were measured with a double sequential immunostaining method. Within the submucosa, seasonal increases in total (MBP+, p less than 0.01) and "activated" (EG2+, p less than 0.01) eosinophils were observed for the patients, which were significant when these counts were compared with counts for those of control subjects (MBP+ p less than 0.01; EG2+ p less than 0.001). Within the nasal epithelium, seasonal increases in total (p less than 0.05) and "activated" (p less than 0.02) eosinophils were also observed. Mast cell counts revealed seasonal increases in
tryptase
-only positive
mast cell
(MCT) (p less than 0.02) but not chymase plus
tryptase
-positive mast cells (MCTC) within the epithelium that were significant when counts were compared with those of control subjects (p less than 0.03). No significant changes were observed within the submucosa or epithelium for total leukocytes (CD45+ cells) or T-lymphocytes (CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, and CD 25+ cells) for either group. Similarly, no significant changes were observed for neutrophils (antielastase), macrophages (CD68+), nor HLA-DR+ cells. In the subjects with rhinitis, seasonal submucosal CD3+ counts correlated with MBP+ eosinophils (r = 0.56; p less than 0.05) and MCTS (r = 0.65; p less than 0.02). Similarly, seasonal epithelial EG2+ eosinophil counts correlated with MCTs (r = 0.56; p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Immunohistology of the nasal mucosa in seasonal allergic rhinitis: increases in activated eosinophils and epithelial mast cells. 153 8
The three-dimensional structure of procarboxypeptidase A (PCPA) from porcine pancreas has been determined at 2 A resolution and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 0.198, with a root-mean-square deviation from ideal values for bond lengths of 0.015 A and for angles of 2.1 degrees. It is compared with procarboxypeptidase B (PCPB) from the same tissue. The 94/95 residue activation segments of PCPA/PCPB have equivalent folds: an N-terminal globular region with an open sandwich antiparallel alpha/antiparallel beta topology, followed by an extended alpha-helical segment, the connection to the enzyme. Alignment of the secondary structures of the activation segments of PCPA and PCPB (residues A1 to A99) indicates a two residue insertion between residues A34 and A35 and a C-terminal helix that is two turns longer in PCPA compared to PCPB. A deletion is observed between residues A43 to A45, the region containing the short 3(10) helix that covers the active site in PCPB. The globular region (A4 to A80) shields the preformed active center of
carboxypeptidase A
(
CPA
), but none of the residues involved in catalysis makes direct contacts with the activation segment. In contrast, subsites S2, S3 and S4 of the enzyme, involved in the binding of peptidic substrates, are blocked by specific contacts with residues AspA36, TrpA38, ArgA47, AspA53 and GluA86 of the activation segment. It has been described that several residues of
CPA
exhibit different conformations in the free enzyme compared to when substrate is bound: Arg127, Arg145, Glu270 and Tyr248. In PCPA all of these residues are found in the "active" conformation, as if substrate were actually bound. The presence of a ligand, tentatively interpreted as a free amino acid (Val) in the active center could explain this fact. The connecting region (A80 to A99), the target for proteolytic activation, establishes fewer contacts with the enzyme in PCPA than in PCPB. The activation segment of PCPA (A4 to A99) remains bound to the enzyme after the first
trypsin
cleavage between ArgA99-Ala1 probably due to the stability conferred on it by the alpha-helix (alpha 3) of the connecting segment. These and other structural features may explain the differences in intrinsic activity and different rates or proteolytic activation of each zymogen.
...
PMID:Three-dimensional structure of porcine pancreatic procarboxypeptidase A. A comparison of the A and B zymogens and their determinants for inhibition and activation. 154 96
We characterized the release and the protease composition of high m.w. complexes released from dispersed human skin mast cells, under conditions that did not disrupt the binding of proteases to proteoglycan. The net percent release ratio of
tryptase
to histamine, after anti-IgE and calcium ionophore A23187 stimulation was higher than those for chymase or carboxypeptidase. This was explained by the greater cell association of carboxypeptidase and chymase, compared with
tryptase
, after
mast cell
degranulation and/or differential cosedimentation of the proteases with mast cells, because treatment of activated mast cells with 1 M NaCl increased the release ratios of chymase and carboxypeptidase more than that of
tryptase
. Tryptase, after release, was stable in 0.12 M NaCl and had a molecular mass of approximately 200 to 250 kDa, suggesting that it was bound to proteoglycan. We demonstrated that complexes containing chymase and carboxypeptidase were separable from
tryptase
-containing complexes by gel filtration and by affinity chromatography. First, on fast protein liquid chromatography, released
tryptase
filtered at a molecular mass of approximately 200 to 250 kDa, compared with chymase and carboxypeptidase at 400 to 560 kDa. Second, by using affinity chromatography with immobilized antitryptase mAb in 0.15 M NaCl, carboxypeptidase and chymase activities were recovered primarily in the effluent and washes of an antitryptase antibody affinity column and cofiltered at 400 to 560 kDa. Tryptase was recovered only in the eluate. Finally, by using potato tuber carboxypeptidase inhibitor-Sepharose affinity chromatography,
tryptase
activity was found primarily in the effluent and washes, filtered at a molecular mass of 200 kDa on fast protein liquid chromatography, and was stable in 0.12 M NaCl buffer at 37 degrees C. Carboxypeptidase and chymase activities were found primarily in the eluate. These findings suggest that
tryptase
and carboxypeptidase/chymase reside in distinct macromolecular complexes. Separate complexes containing these proteases may help explain previous ultrastructural observations in which the distributions of chymase and
tryptase
within a single granule did not always coincide.
...
PMID:Protease composition of exocytosed human skin mast cell protease-proteoglycan complexes. Tryptase resides in a complex distinct from chymase and carboxypeptidase. 156 Feb 3
The factor(s) that causes excessive
mast cell
(MC) proliferation in indolent forms of mastocytosis is not known, nor is it known whether that proliferation is a regulated clonal expansion or merely a non-neoplastic hyperplasia. Human MCs display phenotypes that depend on the microenvironment. Thus, if the phenotype of MCs in mastocytosis lesions is determined to be abnormal for that tissue site (and therefore the MCs are refractory to microenvironmental signals) then a clonal process would be suggested. The authors determined the phenotypes of MCs from the lesional skin of 17 patients with indolent mastocytosis and the bone marrows of 9 patients. They compared them with the phenotypes of MCs from the lesional skin of 8 patients with various dermatitides, the skin of 2 patients with idiopathic anaphylaxis, and the breast skin of 15 control patients. MCs from all the skin specimens showed the characteristic skin MC phenotype, with predominantly scroll-poor granules by ultrastructure and containing
tryptase
and chymase by immunofluorescence detection (the MCTC immunophenotype). The skin MCs of each patient bound avidin and contained carboxypeptidase by immunofluorescence detection. MCs from the bone marrow of patients with indolent mastocytosis, the source of progenitors, also showed the scroll-poor and MCTC phenotypes. These findings do not support an unregulated clonal expansion in indolent forms of mastocytosis. They are consistent with a non-neoplastic hyperplasia or possibly a clonal process in which MCs remain responsive to microenvironmental regulation.
...
PMID:Mast-cell phenotype in indolent forms of mastocytosis. Ultrastructural features, fluorescence detection of avidin binding, and immunofluorescent determination of chymase, tryptase, and carboxypeptidase. 156 49
Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is localized in and released from sensory nerves. It is a potent and long acting vasodilator which has been suggested to play a role in the control of blood flow. Using HPLC and trichloroacetic acid precipitation techniques, we have examined the ability of human
mast cell
lysates and a purified preparation of mast cell tryptase to degrade CGRP. We found that CGRP is effectively cleaved by
tryptase
(Km = 6.8 x 10(-6) mol/L at 37 degrees). Enzymatic activity was inhibited by antipain, leupeptin, N-alpha-p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone, benzamidine or aprotinin, but not by soybean trypsin inhibitor or N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone. The degradation of CGRP by lysates of purified skin mast cells showed a similar pattern of inhibition suggesting that
tryptase
may be the major enzyme involved. The activity of
tryptase
was not affected by the presence of heparin. Incubation of CGRP with
tryptase
resulted in a loss of its vasodilator activity as observed by intravital microscopy of the hamster cheek pouch microvasculature. CGRP preincubated with
tryptase
failed to relax arterioles when added topically. It is suggested that the catalysis of CGRP by
tryptase
could represent an important means by which the activity of this neuropeptide is regulated in vivo.
...
PMID:Human mast cell tryptase attenuates the vasodilator activity of calcitonin gene-related peptide. 156 77
Mast cells are hypothesized to participate in processes leading to tissue fibrosis in human lung and skin. To explore the possible involvement of
mast cell
mediators in fibrogenesis, the mitogenic activity of mast cell tryptase from human lung was examined in vitro. The results indicate that human
tryptase
is a potent inducer of DNA synthesis in fibroblasts from multiple sources, including human lung. As demonstrated by mitogenic responses in fibroblasts, but not in vascular smooth muscle cells,
tryptase
is a mitogen with target cell specificity. Additionally, specificity is demonstrated by the differences in mitogenic activity of
tryptase
in comparison with thrombin, a structurally related mitogenic proteinase. Examination of the mitogenic effects of
tryptase
in the presence of other mitogens reveals synergy with mitogens that act through receptors coupled to intrinsic tyrosine kinases (insulin, epidermal growth factor, and basic fibroblast growth factor) or to G proteins (thrombin and serotonin). In the latter case, studies in Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts using specific receptor agonists and antagonists or receptor-transfected cell lines reveal a requirement for the activation of a G protein (Gi) negatively coupled to adenylate cyclase to act synergistically with
tryptase
. These data establish that human
tryptase
is a potent and specific mitogen in vitro and suggest that mitogenic signals generated by
tryptase
can interact synergistically with signals generated by both tyrosine kinase-coupled and G protein-coupled growth factor receptors.
...
PMID:Human tryptase as a potent, cell-specific mitogen: role of signaling pathways in synergistic responses. 159 Apr 4
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>