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 C57BL/6 mouse differs from the BALB/c mouse in that its ear and skin mast cells and its progenitor bone marrow-derived mast cells (mBMMCs) do not express mouse mast cell protease (mMCP) 7. We now report that, as detected by nuclear run-on analysis, the mMCP-7 gene is transcribed in C57BL/6 mBMMCs at a rate comparable to that in BALB/c mBMMCs. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis and sequencing of the product revealed that the ears of C57BL/6 mice contain small amounts of a mMCP-7 transcript that possesses a 98-base pair deletion. The deletion begins at a normally quiescent cryptic splice site (G416TGAG), 98 base pairs upstream of the normal exon 2/intron 2 splice site (G514TGAG), and introduces a premature stop codon in the alternatively spliced transcript. Thus, even if translated, the mature protein would consist of only 18 amino acids as compared to 245 amino acids in normal mMCP-7. Sequence analysis of the mMCP-7 gene in the C57BL/6 mouse revealed that the cryptic splice site is activated due to a G514-->A point mutation at the first nucleotide of the normal exon 2/intron 2 splice site. This is the first report of a mutation of a gene that encodes a mast cell secretory granule constituent that leads to its loss of expression. Moreover, the mMCP-7 gene is the first found in any species that sequentially has undergone a splice site mutation to cause retention of an intron and then a second splice site mutation to cause activation of a cryptic splice site.
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PMID:Natural disruption of the mouse mast cell protease 7 gene in the C57BL/6 mouse. 857 65

The murine W and Steel loci encode the Kit receptor tyrosine kinase and its ligand, Steel factor, respectively. Loss of function mutations at either the W or Sl loci lead to a variety of pleiotropic developmental defects, including mast cell deficiency and severe macrocytic anemia. In addition to these loss-of-function mutations, gain-of-function mutations in c-kit, leading to constitutive activation of the Kit receptor, have also been identified in both rodent and human mastocytomas. In this study, we have examined the transforming potential and biologic effects of a point mutation that results in substitution of the aspartic acid at codon 814 in the cytoplasmic kinase domain to tyrosine (D814Y) by introducing either wild-type (Kit) or mutant KitD814Y (KDY) cDNA into an interleukin-3-dependent mast cell line IC2. Stimulation of cells expressing the wild-type Kit receptor (IC2/Kit) with Steel factor in vitro resulted in a short-term growth response, whereas IC2/KDY cells were capable of sustained proliferation in a ligand-independent manner. In addition, expression of KDY resulted in the oncogenic transformation of IC2 cells, as determined by colony formation in vitro in the absence of exogenous growth factors and the formation of mastocytomas in vivo in syngeneic DBA/2 mice. Surprisingly, KDY expression in IC2 cells triggered dramatic changes in cell size and the extent of granulation. In addition, KDY induced the expression of mouse mast cell protease-4 (MMCP-4) and MMCP-6. In contrast, neither of these molecular or cellular changes was observed in IC2/Kit cells treated with Steel factor. These results show that the D814Y mutation in the cytoplasmic kinase domain of the Kit receptor induces ligand-independent mast cell growth in vitro, tumorigenicity in vivo, and mast cell differentiation.
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PMID:A point mutation in the catalytic domain of c-kit induces growth factor independence, tumorigenicity, and differentiation of mast cells. 860 25

Gastric ulcers were induced in rats by acetic acid treatment, and the mast cell kinetics in the lesions were studied. Within 24 h, mast cells had disappeared from the treated site and from the marginal zone, corresponding to the area of severe tissue injury. Regenerating epithelium appeared at day 10, and the lesion had healed by day 30. In this healing process, the number of mast cells was significantly increased, and their density in the regenerating mucosa, marginal mucosa, and marginal muscularis propria was 3.2 1.8, and 7.5-fold the control level, respectively. The increase in the number of mast cells was preceded by an increase in the percentage of S-phase mast cells. Mast cells in the mucosa were Alcian blue (AB)+/safranin (S)- and rat mast cell protease (RMCP) I-/II+, consistent with the features of mucosal mast cells throughout the observation period. On the other hand, most mast cells in the muscularis propria exhibited AB+/S+ and RMCP I+/II+ in the early period of ulcer healing. The latter feature was changed to RMCP I+/II- on day 30, indicating that immature CTMC appeared and then developed into mature CTMC during the ulcer healing. The significant change in the number of mast cells suggests that mast cells play an important role in the development and healing of gastric ulcers.
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PMID:Increase in mucosal and connective tissue-type mast cells in the stomach with acetic acid-induced ulcer in rat. 864 53

In common with many intestinal nematode infections, Trichinella spiralis infections in mice are associated with a pronounced intestinal mast cell hyperplasia. The expulsion of the parasite from the gut is temporally associated with intestinal mastocytosis and mast cell function reflected by the secretion of mast cell protease into tissue and serum. In vivo, mucosal mast cell production is highly dependent upon T cell-derived cytokines including IL-3 and IL-4. We present data here to show that intestinal mast cell hyperplasia induced by helminth infection is also dependent upon the production of stem cell factor (SCF). Neutralization of SCF by anti-SCF or anti-SCF receptor mAb completely abrogated the mast cell hyperplasia generated by T. spiralis infection. Moreover, worm expulsion was dramatically delayed in treated mice and a reduced intestinal eosinophilia was observed. These effects did not appear to be mediated through alteration of Th cell responses and the parasite-specific serum antibody response was not affected. The reduction in the mast cell response and worm expulsion observed after SCF neutralization were reversible following cessation of monoclonal treatment. The data presented here clearly demonstrate a major role for SCF in the generation of intestinal mastocytosis and the host protective immune response following parasitic infection.
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PMID:A critical role for stem cell factor and c-kit in host protective immunity to an intestinal helminth. 867 43

Certain nematode infections induce eosinophil infiltration and granulomatous responses in the lungs. To examine the role of mast cells in the development of lung lesions, normal +/+ and genetically mast cell-deficient Ws/Ws rats were infected with the nematode Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. In +/+ rats, numbers of eosinophils in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) increased significantly 3-7 days after infection, and granulomatous responses composed of histiocytes/ macrophages and multinucleate giant cells were triggered in the lungs 3-14 days after infection. Challenge infection, which was carried out on day 28 after primary infection, induced much higher levels of granulomatous response than after primary infection, suggesting that the response is mediated at least in part by an immunological mechanism. In Ws/Ws rats, both the eosinophil percentage in BALF and the size of the granulomas in the lungs were significantly smaller than in +/+ rats after primary as well as after challenge infection. The amount of rat mast cell protease (RMCP) II in +/+ rat BALF was increased 1 day after primary infection and more significantly after challenge infection, suggesting that lung mucosal mast cells were activated more markedly after the challenge infection. In Ws/Ws rats, RMCP II was undetectable throughout the observation period. The time course of nematode migration in the lungs did not differ in +/+ and Ws/Ws rats. These results suggest that mast cell activation might be relevant to eosinophil infiltration and granulomatous response in the lungs, although the responses do not affect lung migration of the nematode.
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PMID:Lung granulomatous response induced by infection with the intestinal nematode Nippostrongylus brasiliensis is suppressed in mast cell-deficient Ws/Ws rats. 887 Jun 98

Phenotype of P815 mouse mast cells changes markedly during culture in the peritoneal cavity of syngenic BDF1 mice. The cells, cultured for 1 week in the peritoneal cavity of syngenic BDF1 mice, proliferate and express high levels of L-histidine decarboxylase (HDC) and mouse mast cell protease (MMCP)-6 mRNAs, indicating the ability of P815 cells to differentiate toward mature connective tissue mast cells. Peritoneal fluid aspirated from P815-inoculated BDF1 mouse and added to cultured P815 cells in vitro was also found to induce HDC mRNA expression, suggesting that at least some of the humoral factors in the peritoneal fluid induce HDC mRNA transcription. Among the erythroid transcription factors, P815 cells expressed GATA-2 but not GATA-1 mRNA before and after the intraperitoneal incubation. In contrast, the expression of NF-E2 subunit p45 disappeared, while expression of subunit mafK was markedly reduced after incubation. Cotransfection assays using HDC-luciferase reporter and p45 and/or mafK expression constructs showed that NF-E2 affects the transactivation of HDC gene. These results suggest that NF-E2 is also an important transcription factor in mast cell differentiation.
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PMID:Histidine decarboxylase expression in mouse mast cell line P815 is induced by mouse peritoneal cavity incubation. 891 Apr 69

Two of the major rat mast cell proteases, rat mast cell protease 1 (RMCP-1) and RMCP-2, have for many years served as important phenotypic markers for studies of various aspects of mast cell (MC) biology. However, except for these proteases only fragmentary information has been available on the structure and complexity of proteases expressed by different subpopulations of rat MCs. To address these questions, cDNA libraries were constructed from freshly isolated rat peritoneal MCs and from the rat mucosal MC line RBL-1. cDNA clones for 10 different serine proteases (RMCP-1-10), and the MC carboxypeptidase A were isolated and characterized. Six of these proteases have not been isolated previously. Based on their protease content, three separate subpopulations of MCs were identified. Connective tissue MCs (CTMCs) from the ear and peritoneum express the chymases RMCP-1 and -5, the tryptases RMCP-6, and -7 and the carboxypeptidase A. However, based on a large difference in the level of expression of RMCP-7, CTMCs of these two organs may be regarded as two separate subpopulations. RMCP-2 and the three closely related proteases of the RMCP-8 subfamily were identified as the major mucosal MC proteases in rat. In contrast to what has been reported for human MCs, no expression of cathepsin G or cathepsin G-like proteases was detected in any of the rat MC populations. To determine mRNA frequencies for the various proteases expressed by normal tissue MCs, an unamplified peritoneal MC cDNA library was screened with a panel of mono-specific cDNA probes. These results showed that peritoneal MCs are highly specialized effector cells with mRNA frequencies for the major proteases in the range of several percent of the total mRNA pool.
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PMID:Secretory granule proteases in rat mast cells. Cloning of 10 different serine proteases and a carboxypeptidase A from various rat mast cell populations. 899 38

Primate alpha-chymases are mast cell neutral proteases that are involved in regulating several regulatory peptides including angiotensin II. Because of significant substrate specificity differences among the chymase group of enzymes, animal models that overexpress primate chymases are crucial for delineating the in vivo function of these enzymes. Activation of alpha-prochymase requires processing enzymes and proteoglycans found in mast cell secretory granules. Thus, the development of models overexpressing active primate chymase requires a mast cell-specific promoter. We show that the 571-base pair (bp) 5'-upstream sequence of the baboon chymase gene, which encodes an alpha-chymase, coupled to the prokaryotic lacZ gene allows the targeting of beta-galactosidase to mast cells in transgenic mice. Tissue expression of the transgene is similar to the expression of the endogenous mouse alpha-chymase mouse mast cell protease-5. A mouse mast cell line that endogenously expresses mouse mast cell protease-5 (JKras mast cells) also selectively supports the expression of this transgene. In vitro transcription studies in JKras mast cells shows the critical role of a GATA cis-regulatory motif in baboon chymase promoter, located approximately 430-bp upstream of the transcription start site. These results suggest that the 571-bp domain of the baboon chymase promoter contains most, if not all, of the mast cell-specific region of the promoter. We describe here for the first time a promoter that directs expression of transgenes specifically to mouse mast cells. This promoter should be generally applicable for dominant expression of mast cell regulatory proteins.
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PMID:Selective reporter expression in mast cells using a chymase promoter. 900 44

The protease mRNA expression phenotype of individual mast cells was studied by in situ hybridization. Mouse mast cell protease (MMCP)-2 mRNA was expressed by mast cells located in the mucosa of the stomach of WB(-)+/+ and (WB x C57BL/6)F1(-)+/+ (hereafter WBB6F1(-)+/+) mice but not by mast cells in the same tissue of C57BL/ 6(-)+/+ mice. Even in the stomach of WBB6F1(-)+/+ mice, mast cells located in the muscularis propria did not express MMCP-2 mRNA. The mRNAs of MMCP-4 and mouse mast cell carboxypeptidase A were not expressed by mast cells in the stomach mucosa of untreated WBB6F1(-)+/+ mice but were expressed after the infection of Strongyloides venezuelensis. We examined whether MMCP-2 mRNA expression varied by changing environments of mast cells. Cultured mast cells of WBB6F1(-)+/+ mice that expressed MMCP-2 mRNA were transplanted into the stomach wall of genetically mast-cell-deficient WBB6F1(-)W/Wv mice. Mast cells that appeared in the mucosa expressed the MMCP-2 mRNA, but mast cells that appeared in the muscularis propria did not, indicating the adaptation of cultured mast cells into a new environment. In contrast to cultured mast cells, peritoneal mast cells of WBB6F1(-)+/+ mice that expressed MMCP-2 mRNA as well did not adapt to the muscularis propria of WBB6F(1)-W/Wv mice. The MMCP-2 mRNA remained to be expressed after the settlement in either the mucosa or the muscularis propria. Furthermore, the peritoneal mast cells did not change the MMCP-4 and MMCP-6 mRNA expression phenotype after the settlement in either the mucosa or the muscularis propria of WBB6F(1)-W/Wv mice. The present result indicated that both intracellular factors such as strain specificity and source of mast cells and extracellular factors such as tissue specificity and helminth infection influenced the protease expression phenotypes.
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PMID:Expression of mast-cell-specific proteases in tissues of mice studied by in situ hybridization. 909 93

In the first three weeks of primary Giardia muris infections B10 mice clear infection more rapidly than BALB/c mice. There is evidence that interferon-gamma contributes to the relative resistance of B10 mice. The nature of the functional contribution of interferon-gamma is unclear and does not relate to the secretory or serum antibody response. Mucosal inflammatory events in these strains have been studied. Apart from a small rise in both strains of goblet cell and mucosal mast cell numbers, associated with release of mast cell protease-1 in serum, no inflammatory infiltrate was observed at the time trophozoites were cleared from the intestinal lumen. Inhibition of mast cell products (5-hydroxytryptamine and histamine) by cyproheptadine enhanced the intensity of infection in both strains. The relative resistance of B10 mice could not be explained in terms of the mucosal inflammatory response.
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PMID:A comparison of mucosal inflammatory responses to Giardia muris in resistant B10 and susceptible BALB/c mice. 910 19


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