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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tryptase, a mediator secreted by human mast cells during immediate reactions, has demonstrated effects on several pathways in vitro. This enzyme can rapidly inactivate fibrinogen and, as a complex with heparin, may prevent coagulation that may otherwise occur when plasma enters tissues at sites of immediate reactions. Tryptase may also activate prostromelysin, which in turn activates latent
collagenase
. When canine pulmonary smooth muscle is incubated with canine tryptase, the contractile response to histamine is increased. Tryptase, quantifiable in complex biologic fluids by immunoassay, can serve as a specific indicator of
mast cell
involvement in certain clinical settings. For example, after bee sting--induced anaphylaxis, tryptase levels in the blood peak at approximately 1 hour, then decline with a half-life of approximately 2 hours. Additionally, elevated tryptase levels in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of asymptomatic, atopic persons with asthma suggest ongoing
mast cell
activation, which may relate to adenosine hyperresponsiveness and a persistence of bronchial hyperreactivity. Tryptase levels in bronchial lavage fluid of atopic patients with asthma rise markedly after endobronchial allergen challenge but not after an exercise challenge, suggesting a lack of
mast cell
involvement in the latter condition.
...
PMID:Tryptase, a mediator of human mast cells. 222 22
Recent reports suggesting that the actions of certain neuroenteric peptides may be mediated in part by the secretion of histamine and other
mast cell
contents could have important implications for gastrointestinal motility and secretion. However, evidence for a
mast cell
-hormonal interaction is based on studies using peritoneal or cutaneous mast cells. Because intestinal mucosal mast cells (MMC) differ functionally from peritoneal mast cells (PMC), we compared the effects of several neurotransmitters and intestinal hormones on histamine secretion from two
mast cell
types in the rat. MMC hyperplasia was induced in rats by infection with the nematode Nippostrongylus brasiliensis, and MMC were isolated from the small intestine by
collagenase
digestion. Substance P, somatostatin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), neurotensin, and bradykinin had a potent secretagogue effect on (10(-7) to 10(-4)M) PMC which was temperature-, energy-, and calcium-dependent. In contrast to PMC, MMC released significant amounts of histamine only when challenged with substance P. Acetylcholine, bombesin, motilin, and pentagastrin had no secretory effect on either PMC or MMC. The differences between PMC and MMC in responsiveness to peptides could not be attributed to the MMC isolation procedure because PMC treated similarly or mixed with MMC suspensions retained their responsiveness to these stimuli. Our results extend the concept of neurocrine control of
mast cell
function, but indicate that mast cells from different sites have distinct profiles of responsiveness to regulatory peptides.
...
PMID:Mast cell heterogeneity: effects of neuroenteric peptides on histamine release. 240 46
Mucosal
mast cell
(MMC) suspensions obtained from the rat intestinal lamina propria by
collagenase
digestion (35.2 +/- 3.2% MMC) were enriched to 65.5 +/- 5.2% MMC by the use of a discontinuous gradient (30%/80%) of Percoll. Further purification to 95.7 +/- 1.3% MMC was achieved using velocity sedimentation at unit gravity (Sta-Put). Analysis of the cells throughout the purification procedure confirms that the purified MMC are representative of the MMC in the initial isolated cell suspension. No differences were seen in terms of size, histamine content, protease content and responsiveness to secretagogues among the initial isolated population, the Percoll-enriched population and the Sta-Put-purified population. This study represents a major advance in
mast cell
research in that, for the first time, mast cells isolated from a homogeneous in vivo mucosal source have been obtained at levels of purity sufficient for specific biochemical characterization. Such characterization will aid in the interpretation of the role of MMC in disease and will provide a firm basis of knowledge of the form and function of intestinal MMC for comparison with mast cells derived from other mucosal sites or cultured in vitro from various organs.
...
PMID:Intestinal mucosal mast cells: isolation from rat lamina propria and purification using unit gravity velocity sedimentation. 241 Mar 58
The effect of collagen degradation products by bacterial (BCDP) and synovial fluid
collagenase
(SCDP) on histamine release from peritoneal mast cells of rat was estimated. Some BCDP as well as SCDP released 60-80% of
mast cell
histamine. In BCDP fraction the most active were BCDP II (m.wt. 13 kD) and BCDP III (m.wt. 6 kD). The last contained the highest percentage of hydroxyproline. As compared with bradykinin, BCDP III was about 50 fold more active as histamine releaser.
...
PMID:Collagen-derived peptides release mast cell histamine. 242 89
Digestion of human foreskin with
collagenase
and hyaluronidase disperses approximately 3.4 X 10(7) nucleated cells per gram of tissue, of which mast cells constitute 4.7%. These may be purified to 80% by use of density gradient centrifugation. The majority of mast cells (79%) measured between 9 and 13 micron in diameter, and the mean histamine content was 4.6 pg/cell. Viability was demonstrated by trypan blue exclusion by 93% of the cells and the low spontaneous histamine secretion of less than 7% in functional studies. Anti-IgE released up to 17.5% of cell-associated histamine within 5 to 7 min. Calcium ionophore-induced release was optimal with 0.3 microM A23187 when 28.6% histamine was released. Unlike human lung mast cells, skin mast cells released histamine in response to compound 48/80 and poly-L-lysine. This release, which was complete within 20 sec, was totally dependent on intact glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation and partially dependent on extracellular calcium. The same characteristics were observed with secretion induced by substance P and morphine. The weak activity of eledoisin and physalaemin suggests that the substance P receptor, like that of the rat
mast cell
, is not of the classical types described for smooth muscle. Morphine-induced secretion was partially blocked by naloxone in a manner not compatible with competitive antagonism at a classical opioid receptor. The sensitivity of skin mast cells to nonimmunologic stimulation clearly distinguishes them from mast cells of the lung and lymphoid tissues and provides evidence of functional heterogeneity within human mast cells.
...
PMID:Human skin mast cells: their dispersion, purification, and secretory characterization. 243 32
With the use of a
collagenase
dispersion technique, cells were isolated from the lamina propria of the human small and large intestine. The cell suspensions contained 8% mast cells, which on average contained 1 to 2 pg of histamine/cell. With the use of histochemical procedures based upon fixative sensitivity and dye binding, which identify functionally distinct
mast cell
subtypes in the rat, dispersed human intestinal mast cells contained approximately equal proportions of two histochemical subtypes analogous to those in the rat. Whether these are functionally distinct as in the rat remains to be determined. The histochemically mixed
mast cell
populations from the human intestinal mucosa secreted histamine in a dose- and energy-dependent manner in response to anti-IgE and A23187, but not 48/80. Theophylline, doxantrazole, quercetin, and salbutamol all significantly inhibited anti-IgE-induced histamine secretion by human intestinal mast cells, but cromolyn sodium and the experimental antisecretory drugs, nedocromil sodium and FPL 52694, did not inhibit histamine secretion by the
mast cell
mixture to a statistically significant extent. Cromolyn sodium inhibited histamine secretion by 15 to 30%, and whether this reflected inhibition of one of the two histochemical
mast cell
subtypes to a greater extent than the other or all the cells to a minimal degree remains to be established. Control investigations of the intestinal cell isolation procedure indicated that these qualities did not reflect effects of the cell dispersal procedure. Further characterization and analysis of intestinal mast cells is essential to determine if functionally distinct
mast cell
subtypes exist in human tissues.
...
PMID:Mast cells from the human intestinal lamina propria. Isolation, histochemical subtypes, and functional characterization. 243 1
A comparison was made between
collagenase
-dispersed guinea-pig atrial and ventricular tissues. Heparin containing cells were stained with alcian blue at pH 2.2, and counted by an automated technique (Technicon H6000). The cells were challenged with the specific antigen (ovalbumin), with antisera to guinea-pig IgG (non-subclass specific), IgG1 and IgG2, and the calcium ionophore A23187. Histamine release was measured by an automated spectrofluorometric technique, and leukotriene C4 was measured by radioimmunoassay. All of the following parameters were higher in the atrial than in ventricular cells (mean ratio and SEM of atrial: ventricular
mast cell
parameters in parenthesis): Histamine content/g wet tissues (3.32 +/- 0.71:1) (p less than 0.05), Absolute
mast cell
number as a proportion of total cell count (3.75 +/- 1.64:1), Histamine release induced by antigen (significant in one out of four experiments), anti-IgG (significant in three out of four experiments), anti-IgG1 (significant in two out of four experiments), and anti-IgG2 (higher but not statistically significant). Ionophore A23187 gave an inconsistent histamine release pattern: significantly higher release from atria in five treatments (different concentrations in different experiments), and higher ventricular release in three. Significantly more leukotriene C4 was released by antigen and the ionophore A23187 (mean of 3-5 treatments), but not with anti-IgG.
...
PMID:Comparison of the response of mast cells in guinea-pig cardiac atria and ventricles. 243 72
We have compared the ability of anti-IgE, calcium ionophore A23187, substance P, compound 48/80, poly-L-lysine, and morphine to release histamine from mast cells of human skin, lung, adenoids, tonsils, and colon. Use of a single
collagenase
/hyaluronidase dispersion technique for all tissues has allowed comparisons of reactivity to be made that are free from methodological variations. Mast cells from all tissues examined secreted histamine in response to anti-IgE and calcium ionophore A23187. However, only skin mast cells were responsive to substance P, compound 48/80, poly-L-lysine, and morphine. Activation of human skin mast cells by these nonimmunologic stimuli clearly distinguishes them from the mast cells of human lung, adenoids, tonsils, and colon and is indicative of functional heterogeneity within the human mast cells population. We propose that the presence of functional receptor sites for neuropeptides and basic compounds on skin mast cells that are not present in
mast cell
populations from mucosal or lymphoid sources reflects a specialized role for these cells in vascular homeostasis.
...
PMID:Human mast cell heterogeneity: histamine release from mast cells dispersed from skin, lung, adenoids, tonsils, and colon in response to IgE-dependent and nonimmunologic stimuli. 245 Jan 14
The functional role of mast cells in rheumatoid synovium was investigated by assessing the ability of mast cell tryptase to activate latent
collagenase
derived from rheumatoid synoviocytes. Tryptase, a
mast cell
neutral protease, was demonstrated in situ to reside in rheumatoid synovial mast cells, by an immunoperoxidase technique using a mouse mAb against tryptase, and in vitro to be released by dispersed synovial mast cells after both immunologic and nonimmunologic challenge. Each rheumatoid synovial
mast cell
contains an average of 6.2 pg of immunoreactive tryptase and the percent release values of this protease correlated with those of histamine (r = 0.58, p less than 0.01). The ability of purified tryptase to promote collagenolysis was demonstrated in a dose-dependent fashion using latent
collagenase
derived from rheumatoid synovium, synovial fluid, IL-1-stimulated cultured synoviocytes, and partially purified latent
collagenase
derived from conditioned media, with between 10 and 92% of the collagen substrate degraded. [3H] Collagen, treated with tryptase-activated latent
collagenase
, was subjected to electrophoresis on SDS polyacrylamide gels and autoradiography showed the collagen degradation pattern (A, B) characteristically produced by
collagenase
. Mast cell lysates also activated synovial latent
collagenase
yielding 24% digestion of collagen substrate. This activator in
mast cell
lysates could be inhibited by diisopropylflurophosphate or by immunoadsorption of tryptase. Thus, mast cells may activate metalloproteinases and play a role in the catabolism of collagen that occurs in rheumatoid synovium.
...
PMID:Activation of latent rheumatoid synovial collagenase by human mast cell tryptase. 245 61
Rat uterine tissue was dissociated by enzymatic digestion with
collagenase
and viable mast cells were obtained. Their viability was assessed by the ability to exclude trypan blue dye and to respond functionally to different stimuli. Challenge with anti-IgE gave a calcium-dependent histamine release of 49%, whilst the undigested uterine fragments gave 23%. Moreover, they were capable of releasing histamine on challenge with the compound 48/80, suggesting a similarity with connective tissue mast cells. This similarity was further supported by their insensitivity to aldehyde blocking of dye binding. The final dispersed cell preparation contained 3 X 10(5) mast cells/g of uterine tissue, representing about 2% of total nucleated cells. The total histamine content of the undigested uterus was 2.5 micrograms/g of tissue, whilst after digestion the histamine determined was 1.2 pg per
mast cell
with a yield of 14%. The total histamine content of the uterus changed throughout the reproductive cycle, increasing before ovulation, reaching a maximum during ovulation and then decreasing after embryo implantation. This suggests that the implanting embryo, interacting with the uterus, may be capable of inducing the release of histamine. The embryo-derived histamine releasing factor (EHRF) that we have described previously is capable of inducing 22% histamine-release on uterine mast cells, thus supporting this hypothesis.
...
PMID:Dispersal of rat uterine mast cells and their functional response to an embryo-derived histamine releasing factor: a possible model for embryo implantation. 246 97
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