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)

Romanowsky-Giemsa (RG) stains were devised during the 19th century for identifying plasmodia parasites in blood smears. Later, RG stains became standard procedures for hematology and cytology. Numerous attempts have been made to apply RG staining to formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue sections, with varied success. Most published work on this topic described RG staining methods in which sections were overstained, then subjected to acid differentiation; unfortunately, the differentiation step often caused inconsistent staining outcomes. If staining is performed under optimal conditions with control of dye concentration, pH, solution temperature and staining time, no differentiation is required. We used RG and 0.002 M buffer, pH 42, for staining and washing sections. All steps were performed at room temperature. After staining and air drying, sections were washed in 96-100% ethanol to remove extraneous stain. Finally, sections were washed in xylene and mounted using DPX. Staining results were similar to routine hemalum and eosin (H & E) staining. Nuclei were blue; intensity depended largely on chromatin density. RNA-rich sites were purple. Collagen fibers, keratin, muscle cells, erythrocytes and white matter of the central nervous system were stained pinkish and reddish hues. Cartilage matrix, mast cell granules and areas of myxomatous degeneration were purple. Sulfate-rich mucins were stained pale blue, while those lacking sulfate groups were unstained. Deposits of hemosiderin, lipofuscin and melanin were greenish, and calcium deposits were blue. Helicobacter pylori bacteria were violet to purple. The advantages of the method are its close similarity to H & E staining and technical simplicity. Hemosiderin, H. pylori, mast cell granules, melanin and specific granules of different hematopoietic cells, which are invisible or barely distinguishable by H & E staining, are visualized. Other advantages over previous RG stains include shorter staining time and avoidance of acetone.
...
PMID:Buffered Romanowsky-Giemsa method for formalin fixed, paraffin embedded sections: taming a traditional stain. 2859 83

It has long been hypothesized that bleeding symptoms in people with hypermobility occur as a result of abnormalities in the collagen of the vessel wall or the connective tissues. The bleeding symptoms, particularly in the skin, have been attributed to the fragility of skin and blood vessels caused by "defective collagen wickerwork" of the reticular layer of the skin. Collagen, which forms the framework of vessel walls, is altered in many patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) leading to weakening of the vessel wall or the supporting tissues. Another important function of subendothelial collagen is its interaction with platelets and von Willebrand factor, which results in the propagation of a platelet plug. Thus, abnormalities in subendothelial collagen may alter its interaction with platelets and VWF. More recently, hypermobile-EDS (hEDS) has been associated with mast cell disorders, a condition independently associated with bleeding symptoms. It has also been observed that patients with mild bleeding disorders have a more severe bleeding phenotype when they have co-existing joint hypermobility.
...
PMID:An update on the new classification of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and review of the causes of bleeding in this population. 3132 66


<< Previous 1 2