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)

LAMA-84, a human leucocytic cell line, which upon establishment was described as having megakaryocytic, erythroid and granulocytic characteristics, was analysed for expression of various differentiation markers. In addition to some of the previously described phenotypic characteristics, this cell line was found to express mRNA for several proteins characteristic for basophilic leucocytes and mast cells. The authors show that LAMA-84 cells express mRNA for the mast cell tryptase, the proteoglycan core protein, carboxypeptidase A and the alpha and beta chains of the high affinity IgE receptor (Fc epsilon RI). The authors examined the potential of LAMA-84 to differentiate in serum-free medium or after DMSO or PMA treatment. Depending on the inducing factor, surface expression of the Fc epsilon RI alpha-chain was increased from 20% to 35-50% of the cells and mRNA levels for tryptase were increased in serum-free medium and after DMSO treatment. LAMA-84 was found to express CD13, CDw17, CD29, CD33, CD40, CD45 and CD117. Furthermore, mRNA for the eosinophil/basophil markers Charcot-Leyden crystal (CLC) protein and the major basic protein (MBP), as well as the erythrocyte differentiation marker alpha-globin, was detected. However, the authors observed only trace amounts of mRNA for another erythroid differentiation marker (glycophorin), trace amounts of the megakaryocytic marker GPIIIa, and no detectable level of GPIb alpha. By comparing the expression pattern of a panel of differentiation markers in LAMA-84, and a second human cell line (KU812) expressing a basophil phenotype, it is evident that these cell lines, which presently are the only two cell lines identified with basophilic characteristics, share a large number of phenotypic characteristics.
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PMID:Characterization of a human basophil-like cell line (LAMA-84). 869 92

pl6l is a membrane glycoprotein expressed on mast cells and on activated macrophages but on few if any other cells of hematopoietic lineages. Its lack of expression on basophils makes it useful to distinguish mast cells from basophils and aids in the analysis of mast cells and their precursors. p161 was purified from the mast cell line CFTL-12 by affinity chromatography and subjected to limited proteolysis. The sequences of the resultant peptides indicated that p161 is homologous with rat and human CD13/aminopeptidase N. Using oligonucleotide primers derived from rat CD13 cDNA, a mouse cDNA was obtained. Its deduced amino acid sequence displays 87% identity with rat CD13 and 76 % identity with human CD13. Expression of the mouse cDNA in M12 cells, which are p161 negative, renders these cells positive for staining with the monoclonal anti-p161 Ab, K-1. Furthermore, a mAb raised against partially purified mouse intestinal aminopeptidase N specifically blocked the binding of K-1 to both CFTL-12 cells and the transfected M12 cells. These results strongly indicate that mouse p161 is CD13/aminopeptidase N. Northern blot analysis shows that p161 mRNA is most abundantly expressed in the intestinal tract and kidney and is present in liver, lymph node, spleen, and brain.
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PMID:p161, a murine membrane protein expressed on mast cells and some macrophages, is mouse CD13/aminopeptidase N. 880 62

The immunophenotypic characteristics of both bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB) mast cells (MC), from a patient suffering from an aggressive systemic mast cell disease (SMCD), were sequentially analyzed by flow cytometry using direct immunofluorescence. Analysis was carried out at diagnosis, during clinical response induced by interferon alfa-2h/prednisone therapy, and later at relapse. Our results show that together with the CD117 and IgE characteristic markers, at diagnosis BM MC showed strong expression of CD11c, CD13, CD29, CD33, CD44, CD45, CD63, and CD71, and they were also positive for CD2, CD22, CD25, and CD54 although at a lower level. PB MC displayed similar immunophenotypic characteristics although they had a lower expression of CD11c, CD25, CD33, CD63, CD69, and CD71 with a higher reactivity for CD117. Unlike BM MC, PB MC were weakly positive for CD41a and CD61. Sequential studies showed decreased numbers of both BM and PB MC during clinical response associated with a higher expression of the CD29 and CD54 adhesion molecules. In turn, clinical relapse was related to increased numbers of PB and BM MC together with lower CD2, CD11c, CD45, and and CD54 expression and a higher reactivity for the CD117 and CD25 antigens. CD2 had become negative at the last follow-up study. In addition, an increased proportion of S-phase MC was observed at relapse. These findings suggest that the assessment of the quantitative expression of cell-adhesion molecules and growth-factor receptors together with cell cycle studies of mast cells could be of value for monitoring therapy and predicting clinical outcome in aggressive SMCD.
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PMID:Sequential immunophenotypic analysis of mast cells in a case of systemic mast cell disease evolving to a mast cell leukemia. 914 16

Flavonoids and other benzopyrone substances, having an appropriate hydroxylation profile, may inhibit the metalloenzymes leucine aminopeptidase (LAP), aminopeptidase M (AP-M), and carboxypeptidase A (CP-A). A structural feature that evidently favours the interaction between flavonoids and the three metalloenzymes is the 2,3-double bond conjugating the A and B rings and conferring a planar structure. This can be considered virtually indispensable for inhibition of the three metallopeptidases, though the hydroxylation profile required differed for each of the enzymes, and the interaction mechanism and behaviour also differed. The inhibitory effect of flavonoids on LAP was reversible, and to be effective the flavonoid had to have conjugated A and B rings and ortho-dihydroxylation on at least one of the aromatic rings. This same requirement was essential for inhibition by coumarins and was attributed to a catechol-like mechanism of interaction. The inhibitory effects on AP-M were due to inactivation of the enzyme, irreversibly altered by flavonoids with a 2,3-double bond and a minimum of one hydroxyl substituent on each of the aromatic rings. With CP-A, conjugation of the A and B rings enhanced the inhibitory effect of flavonoids, though it was not strictly required. The interaction between the polyphenolic substances tested and the two zinc aminopeptidases was not reversed by adding zinc to the reaction medium, indicating that the inhibition is not due to the coordination of the phenolic hydroxyl groups with the catalytical zinc of active site, though the presence of zinc affected the interaction behaviour differently according to each substance's hydroxylation profile.
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PMID:Inhibition of zinc metallopeptidases by flavonoids and related phenolic compounds: structure-activity relationships. 979 38

The recently discovered native endomorphins play an important role in opioid analgesia, but their metabolic fate in the organism remains relatively little known. This paper describes the application of high-performance liquid chromatography combined with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to identify the degradation products resulting from the incubation of endomorphins with proteolytic enzymes. The native endomorphin-1, H-Tyr-Pro-Trp-Phe-NH2 (1), and endomorphin-2, H-Tyr-Pro-Phe-Phe-NH2 (2), and an analog of endomorphin-2, H-Tyr-Pro-Phe-Phe-OH (3), were synthetized, and the levels of their resistance against carboxypeptidase A, carboxypeptidase Y, aminopeptidase M and proteinase A were determined. The patterns of peptide metabolites identified by this method indicated that carboxypeptidase Y first hydrolyzes the C-terminal amide group to a carboxy group, and then splits the peptides at the Trp3-Phe4 or Phe3-Phe4 bond. The remaining fragment peptides are stable against the enzymes investigated. Carboxypeptidase A degrades only analog 3 at the Phe3-Phe4 bond. Aminopeptidase M cleaves the peptides at the Pro2-Trp3 or Pro2-Phe3 bond. The C-terminal fragments hydrolyze further, giving amino acids and Phe-NH2-s while the N-terminal part displays a resistance to further aminopeptidase M digestion. Proteinase A exhibits a similar effect to carboxypeptidase Y: the C-terminal amide group is first converted to a carboxy group, and one amino acid is then split off from the C-terminal side.
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PMID:Liquid chromatographic study of the enzymatic degradation of endomorphins, with identification by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. 1042 May 97

Human mast cells are known to arise from a CD34(+)/c-kit(+) progenitor cell population that also gives rise to neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils, and monocytes. To further characterize cells within the CD34(+)/c-kit(+) population that yield mast cells, this progenitor was additionally sorted for CD13, a myeloid marker known to appear early on rodent mast cells and cultured human mast cells, but not expressed or expressed at low levels on human tissue mast cells; and cultured in recombinant human (rh) stem cell factor (rhSCF), rh interleukin-3 (rhIL-3; first week only), and rhIL-6. Initial sorts revealed that although the majority of cells in culture arose from the CD34(+)/c-kit(+)/CD13(-) cell population, mast cells arose from a CD34(+)/c-kit(+)/CD13(+) progenitor cell that also gave rise to a population of monocytes. Sequential sorting confirmed that CD34(+)/c-kit(+)/CD13(+) cells in CD34(+)/c-kit(+)/CD13(-) sorts gave rise to the few mast cells observed in CD13(-) sorted cells. CD34(+)/c-kit(+)/CD13(+) cells plated as single cells in the presence of various cytokine combinations gave rise to pure mast cell, monocyte, or mixed mast cell/monocyte progeny. Addition of either rh granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF) or rhIL-5 to the CD34(+)/c-kit(+)/CD13(+) progenitor cell population cultured in rhSCF, rhIL-3, and rhIL-6 did increase the number of total cells cultured and in the case of rhIL-5, did increase total mast cell numbers. Neither rhGM-CSF or rhIL-5 led to additional cell populations, ie, even with the addition of rhGM-CSF or rhIL-5, only mast cells and monocytes grew from CD34(+)/c-kit(+)/CD13(+) cells. Thus, human mast cells and a population of monocytes arise from precursor cells that express CD34, c-kit, and CD13; and within which, are mast cell, monocyte, and mast/monocyte (bipotential) precursors.
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PMID:Demonstration that human mast cells arise from a progenitor cell population that is CD34(+), c-kit(+), and expresses aminopeptidase N (CD13). 1049 5

Mast cells are critical components of innate and adaptive immunity that differentiate in tissues in situ from circulating committed progenitor cells. We now demonstrate that human cord blood-derived mast cell progenitors are susceptible to infection with macrophagetropic (M-tropic) and dualtropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) isolates but not with T-cell-tropic (T-tropic) strains. Mast cell progenitors (c-kit(+) CD13(+) cells with chloroacetate esterase activity) were purified from 4-week-old cultures of cord blood mononuclear cells maintained in stem cell factor, interleukin-6 (IL-6), and IL-10 using a CD14 depletion column. These progenitors expressed CCR3, CCR5, and CXCR4, as well as low levels of CD4. When infected in vitro with viruses pseudotyped with different HIV and simian immunodeficiency virus envelope glycoproteins, only M-tropic and dualtropic, but not T-tropic, viruses were able to enter mast cell progenitors. Both the CCR5-specific monoclonal antibody 2D7 and TAK-779, a nonpeptide inhibitor of CCR5-mediated viral entry, blocked HIV-1 strain ADA infection by >80%. Cultures infected with replication-competent virus produced progressively increasing amounts of virus for 21 days as indicated by p24 antigen detection. Mast cell progenitors that were exposed to an M-tropic, green fluorescent protein-expressing HIV-1 strain exhibited fluorescence indicative of viral entry and replication on a single-cell level and retained virus production during differentiation. The trafficking of mast cell progenitors to multiple tissues, combined with the long life span of mature mast cells, suggests that they could provide a widespread and persistent HIV reservoir in AIDS.
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PMID:Human Mast cell progenitors can be infected by macrophagetropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and retain virus with maturation in vitro. 1160 22

Insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I) is a 7648-Da polypeptide consisting of 70 amino acids. Clinically, IGF-I might be used in type II diabetes, which requires a life-long treatment. Therefore, delivery routes other than parenteral injections are highly desirable. For convenience, the peroral route is the most attractive. Therefore, in an attempt to answer the feasibility of oral delivery of IGF-I we examined the metabolism of this polypeptide in the gut in the presence of crude porcine pancreatic enzymes (CPPE) and flushings of the small and large intestine from pig, rat, and dog. Moreover, incubation studies with purified pancreatic enzymes that are present in the intestine were performed to determine the most active enzymes responsible for the intestinal cleavage of IGF-I. IGF-I was mainly degraded by chymotrypsin (t(1/2) = 2.7 min) and trypsin (t(1/2) = 34.6 min), whereas in the presence of aminopeptidase M and carboxypeptidase A IGF-I was stable up to 90 min. IGF-I was degraded in flushings from the jejunum, ileum, and colon. However, there were no significant differences in the stability of IGF-I between the examined intestinal segments. The addition of serine protease inhibitors such as a combination of aprotinin, soybean trypsin inhibitor, and Nalpha-p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone (TLCK), as well as casein profoundly improved the stability. Because we were able to improve the stability of IGF-I in vitro in all species at the same degree we speculate that a similar extension of half-life might also be possible in the human intestinal system.
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PMID:In vitro assessment of intestinal IGF-I stability. 1178 19

Mast cell sarcoma is an extremely rare and aggressive type of mast cell disease. Only a few cases have been described so far, and little is known about the biology and phenotype of afflicted cells. We describe morphologic and immunophenotypic properties of neoplastic mast cells in a case of an intracranial mast cell sarcoma. In Wright-Giemsa-stained cytospin preparations, the morphology of dispersed cells appeared to be highly atypical with a considerable percentage of metachromatic blasts and mast cells with bilobed or multilobed nuclei. Combined toluidine blue/immunofluorescence staining revealed expression of CD13, CD45, CD88, CD116, and CD117 (c-KIT) on neoplastic mast cells. As assessed by immunohistochemistry, mast cells were immunoreactive for tryptase and CD68R, In contrast, the CD2 antigen that is expressed in mast cells in patients with indolent systemic mastocytosis was not detectable. Mast cells also failed to display the c-KIT mutation Asp-816-Val, which is typically found in systemic mast cell disorders. Together, neoplastic mast cells in a case of mast cell sarcoma were found to exhibit unique morphologic, phenotypical, and molecular features when compared with mast cells in indolent mastocytosis or normal tissue mast cells.
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PMID:Morphologic and immunophenotypic properties of neoplastic cells in a case of mast cell sarcoma. 1282 96

Sequential immunomagnetic isolation with 2 monoclonal antibodies was used to purify and characterize an undifferentiated mast cell in adult mouse bone marrow that had not been previously recognized. This cell represents 0.02% of the cells in the bone marrow, is CD34(+), CD13(+), and c-kit(+), and does not express FcepsilonRI. However, by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) the cell contains message for the alpha and beta subunits of FcepsilonRI, mast cell-specific proteases, and carboxypeptidase A. Morphologically, this cell has a large nucleus, little cytoplasm, few cytoplasmic organelles, and no cytoplasmic granules. In vitro, in the presence of interleukin-3 (IL-3) and stem cell factor (SCF) these cells differentiate only into a granulated mast cell that now expresses CD13, c-kit, mast cell-specific gangliosides, FcepsilonRI, and binds immunoglobulin E (IgE). When injected into lethally irradiated mice, these cells are able to reconstitute the mast cell population in the spleen.
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PMID:Identification and characterization of undifferentiated mast cells in mouse bone marrow. 1571 18


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