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

The retinoic acid receptor (RAR alpha) is expressed in virtually all hematopoietic lineages, but the role of this transcription factor in regulating the growth and differentiation of hematopoietic progenitors is unknown. We have constructed a mutant RAR alpha that both exhibits dominant-negative activity against the normal RAR alpha in transient expression assays in mouse fibroblasts and inhibits retinoic acid-induced neutrophilic differentiation of the HL-60 human promyelocytic leukemia cell line. When this dominant-negative RAR alpha construct is introduced into the multipotent interleukin-3-dependent FDCP mix A4 murine hematopoietic cell line, there is a rapid switch from spontaneous neutrophil/monocyte differentiation to basophil/mast cell development. Thus, in this multipotent hemopoietic cell line the normal RAR alpha transcription factor and/or related molecules appear to promote the differentiation of neutrophils and monocytes but suppress the development of basophils/mast cells.
...
PMID:A mutated retinoic acid receptor-alpha exhibiting dominant-negative activity alters the lineage development of a multipotent hematopoietic cell line. 133 22

Biphasic skin reaction with peak response at 1 and 24 h with prominent mast cell degranulation was induced by intravenous application of a monoclonal anti-DNP IgE antibody and subsequent skin test. This reaction was hapten-specific and mast-cell-dependent because no reaction was observed when oxasolone was used as an elicitation antigen or skin test was elicited in genetically mast-cell-deficient mice (W/Wvv). A partial spongiotic reaction and mononuclear cell infiltration into the epidermis were observed in mice with hyperplastic epidermis induced by topical retinoic acid. Cotransfer of DNFB-sensitized lymph node cells with anti-DNP IgE antibodies failed to enhance the skin test reaction in unsensitized mice. These results suggest that, to some degree, IgE antibody may play some role in the development of eczematous skin lesions in the rodent system without the involvement of cellular hypersensitivity.
...
PMID:Induction of eczematous skin reaction in experimentally induced hyperplastic skin of Balb/C mice by monoclonal anti-DNP IgE antibody: possible implications for skin lesion formation in atopic dermatitis. 198 77

In cultures of normal mouse hematopoietic cells containing Interleukin-3 develop cells with many features of mast cells. These cells seem heterogeneous with respect to morphological and biochemical examination. Nevertheless, most of the cells show many granules and a low ability to self-renew. In the present report we describe the development of a blastic cell population, termed mastoblasts, when normal mouse hematopoietic cells are exposed continuously to retinoic acid (RA: 10(-6) to 10(-5) M/l). Using H*3-thymidine incorporation, cell cycle measurement and protein content by flow cytometry, transmission and scanning electron microscopy, we show that these cells seem to be of mast cell lineage but with a high self-renewing capability. So, RA is able to inhibit mast cell differentiation and to provide us a "mastoblastic" population which could be used as a model to study mast cell differentiation.
...
PMID:[Effect of retinoic acid on the differentiation and growth of murine mastocyte precursors]. 297 59

Mast cell colonies grew in methylcellulose when mouse spleen cells were cultured for 14 days in the presence of medium conditioned by concanavalin A-stimulated spleen cells. Tumor-promoting phorbol esters, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and phorbol-12,13-didecanoate, enhanced the concanavalin A-stimulated spleen cell-conditioned medium-induced colony growth of mast cell progenitors. The effect of TPA on this colony growth was blocked by the addition of two antipromoters of experimental skin carcinogenesis, i.e., retinoic acid and dexamethasone. These results show that TPA has the ability to enhance the clonal proliferation of mouse mast cells and that this effect of TPA is closely related to tumor-promoting activity.
...
PMID:Enhancement of clonal proliferation of mouse mast cells by a tumor-promoting phorbol ester. 671 2

Mouse-transformed epidermal cell line (Pam 212) generated the soluble mediators for promoting the growth of a mast cell line (MC9) in the presence of retinoic acid at a concentration of 10(-6)-10(-7) M. The effective molecule of MC9 cell growth promoting factor (MC9-GF) was non-dialyzable and eluted between the molecular weight of 45 K and 68 K on a TSK 2000 G column. Chromatofocusing analysis revealed that this factor had a pI range between 7.0 and 7.5. Anti-c-kit ligand antibody abrogated MC9-GF activity and RT-PCR analysis demonstrated that retinoic acid upregulates c-kit ligand mRNA expression by Pam cells. Several recombinant cytokines including IL1-alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-2, IL-3 or IL-4 did not promote MC9 cell growth at a concentration of 100 U/ml. The presence of anti-IL-1 alpha, -IL-1 beta, -IL-2, -IL-3 or -IL-4 antibodies did not abrogate the MC9-GF activity except for anti-c-kit ligand antibody.
...
PMID:Retinoic acid upregulates c-kit ligand production by murine keratinocyte in vitro and increases cutaneous mast cell in vivo. 753 79

The retinoic acid-stimulated mouse-transformed epidermal cell line Pam 212 generated soluble mediators (RA-Pam sup) which showed mast cell-proliferating activity and induced mast cell-like colonies from bone marrow cells. Both mucosal-type and connective tissue-type mast cells were demonstrated on histochemical analysis. The 3T3 fibroblast cell line or human trichilemmomal cell line (TL1) also generated similar molecules on retinoic acid stimulation. Anti-stem cell factor antibody presented a rather more potent inhibitory activity on RA-Pam sup-dependent mast cell colony formation than did anti-IL3 and -IL4 antibodies. RA-Pam sup only induced mast cell colonies in semisolid culture and failed to promote mast cell growth in a suspension culture. In addition, mast cell colonies showed close contact with fibroblast-like cells on the methylcellulose plate, but this finding was not observed in culture without RA-Pam sup.
...
PMID:Induction and characterization of mast cell colonies by culture supernatant of retinoic acid-treated mouse keratinocytes. 768 25

The cell line HMC-1, derived from a patient with mast cell leukaemia, is the only established cell line exhibiting a phenotype similar to that of human mast cells. This paper reports on a detailed characterization of the expression of a panel of markers for various types of immature and mature haematopoietic cells in the HMC-1. We also studied the potential of HMC-1 to differentiate upon treatment with conditioned media from the human T-cell line Mo, retinoic acid or DMSO. HMC-1 was found to express several mast cell-related markers. A high expression of Kit, the receptor for stem-cell factor, was detected. The majority of the cells were stained with a MoAb against the mast cell-specific serine protease tryptase. Of particular interest was the finding that beta-tryptase mRNA, but not alpha-tryptase mRNA, was expressed in HMC-1. Using enzyme-histochemistry we were able to show that the beta-tryptase was enzymatically active, indicating that tryptase can form active homotetramers. Both heparin and chondroitin sulfate were found to be present in approximately equal amounts. HMC-1 lacked surface expression of the high-affinity IgE receptor, which was confirmed by the absence of mRNA of the alpha- and beta-chains of the IgE-receptor complex. However, a strong expression of the gamma-chain of the IgE-receptor complex was detected. A positive staining of the monocyte/macrophage marker CD68 was obtained, as well as a strong hybridization signal for the eosinophilic/basophilic-related differentiation marker the Charcot-Leyden crystal. Treatment of HMC-1 with conditioned media from the human T-cell line Mo, retinoic acid or DMSO induced only moderate changes in the surface or intracellular expression of the studied markers. The agents tested neither induced any of the monocyte/granulocyte markers examined, nor expression of the Fc epsilon RI alpha-chain.
...
PMID:Phenotypic characterization of the human mast-cell line HMC-1. 819 Dec 24

Expression of a mast cell tryptase mRNA was detected in two human monocytic cell lines, the U-937 and the Mono Mac 6, and in normal human peripheral blood (PB) monocytes. In the U-937 cell line but not in normal PB monocytes, the tryptase expression was upregulated 3-50 fold following phorbol ester (PMA)-induced differentiation, but no such induction was seen after retinoic acid, interferon-gamma or vitamin D3 exposure. The tryptases expressed in PMA-induced and non-induced U-937 and in Mono Mac 6 were characterized by PCR amplification and nucleotide sequence analysis. The U-937 cell line was found to express a tryptase identical to one of the previously cloned mast-cell beta tryptases (Tryptase I), and the tryptase expressed in Mono Mac 6 was found to be nearly identical to the previously cloned alpha tryptase. By northern blot analysis with oligonucleotide probes specific for the alpha and beta tryptases both cell lines were found to express only one type of tryptase. Densitometric quantifications of tryptase mRNA levels, in the two cell lines, showed approximately 80 times higher mRNA levels in Mono Mac 6 compared to non-induced U-937. Immunohistochemical staining for tryptase showed a marked heterogeneity in the Mono Mac 6 cell line. Only one out of 10 cells were positive for the protein but the levels in these cells were very high, equivalent, or even higher than the levels seen in the human mast cell line HMC-1. This shows that the expression of a single tryptase, in this case the alpha tryptase, is sufficient for the production of a stable protein and probably also a stable proteolytically active tetramer. The family of human mast-cell tryptases has been considered to represent a class of proteases specifically expressed in mast cells and basophilic leucocytes. The expression of tryptases in two monocytic cell lines and in normal PB monocytes indicate that in humans, the lineage specificity of these serine proteases is less restricted than earlier expected. The cloning of a full length cDNA for the murine counterpart to the human mast cell tryptases, the MMCP-6, is presented. No expression of the MMCP-6 was detected in a panel of mouse monocyte or macrophage cell lines indicating a species difference in the lineage specificity of the 'mast cell tryptases'.
...
PMID:Expression of a mast cell tryptase in the human monocytic cell lines U-937 and Mono Mac 6. 821 Sep 98

We examined the effects of retinoids on the human mast cell development using a serum-deprived culture system. When 10-week cultured mast cells derived from CD34(+) cord blood cells were used as target cells, both all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and 9-cis RA inhibited the progeny generation under stimulation with stem cell factor (SCF) in a dose-dependent manner (the number of progeny grown by SCF plus RA at 10(-7) mol/L was one tenth of the value obtained by SCF alone). The early steps in mast cell development appear to be less sensitive to RA according to the single CD34(+)c-kit(+) cord blood cell culture study. The optimal concentration of RAs also reduced the histamine concentration in the cultured mast cells (3.00 +/- 0.47 pg per cell in SCF alone, 1.44 +/- 0.18 pg per cell in SCF+ATRA, and 1.41 +/- 0.10 pg per cell in SCF+9-cis RA). RT-PCR analyses showed the expression of RARalpha, RARbeta, RXRalpha, and RXRbeta messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) in 10-week cultured mast cells. The addition of an RAR-selective agonist at 10(-10) mol/L to 10(-7) mol/L decreased the number of mast cells grown in SCF, whereas an RXR-selective agonist at up to 10(-8) mol/L was inactive. Among RAR subtype selective retinoids used at 10(-9) mol/L to 10(-7) mol/L, only the RARalpha agonist was equivalent to ATRA at 10(-7) mol/L in its ability to inhibit mast cell growth. Conversely, the addition of excess concentrations of a RARalpha antagonist profoundly counteracted the retinoid-mediated suppressive effects. These results suggest that RA inhibits SCF-dependent differentiation of human mast cell progenitors through a specific receptor. (Blood. 2000;95:2821-2828)
...
PMID:Retinoic acid is a negative regulator for the differentiation of cord blood-derived human mast cell progenitors. 1077 27

Investigation of mast cell responsiveness toward retinoic acid (RA) revealed selective promotion of ICAM-3 expression in the human mast cell line HMC-1. This process was dose- and time-dependent and detectable by flow cytometry, Western blot analysis, ELISA, and Northern blot analysis. ICAM-3 modulation was found to be cell-type dependent, detectable also for HL-60 cells and monocytes but not U-937 and only weakly for KU812 cells. Terminally differentiated skin mast cells also failed to up-modulate their ICAM-3, suggesting the requirement for some degree of immaturity for the process. RA-mediated effects on ICAM-1 expression, studied in parallel, were clearly distinct from those on ICAM-3. Investigation of retinoid receptor expression, known to mediate intracellular RA signaling, revealed presence of RAR alpha, RAR gamma, RXR beta, and RXR gamma transcripts in all cell lines studied, and HMC-1 cells were the only line lacking RXR alpha. RAR beta, not expressed at baseline, was induced by RA in a fashion obviously correlating with ICAM-3 up-regulation. Increased ICAM-3 expression was of functional significance, such that processes stimulated or co-stimulated via ICAM-3 (homotypic aggregation, IL-8 secretion) were clearly enhanced upon RA pretreatment, suggesting that RA may contribute via hitherto unrecognized pathways to immune function and host defense.
...
PMID:Retinoic acid up-regulates myeloid ICAM-3 expression and function in a cell-specific fashion--evidence for retinoid signaling pathways in the mast cell lineage. 1126 82


1 2 3 Next >>