Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To clarify whether in vitro-cultured basophils have features of mast cells, basophils grown in semisolid and liquid culture were studied ultrastructurally and cytochemically and were compared with freshly isolated basophils and mast cells. Ultrastructurally, the cultured basophils had pleomorphic cytoplasmic granules, some of which were similar to
mast cell
granules. However, scroll formation, characteristic of
mast cell
granules, was not observed in cells grown in semisolid and liquid culture. Cytochemically, the reactivity patterns of acidic glycoconjugates in the cultured cells more closely resembled those of the freshly isolated basophils than of the mast cells. In addition, the basophils grown in liquid culture showed a more matured form and had stronger reactivity to glycoconjugates, acid phosphatase and
peroxidase
than did the cells grown in semisolid culture, suggesting that the liquid culture system was better for the basophil.
...
PMID:Cultured human basophils with ultrastructural and ultracytochemical features of mast cells. 291 98
Although the hematopoietic origin of mast cells is very probable, the cell from which they originate is still a matter of speculation. The description of "transitional basophil/mast cells" in myeloproliferative disorders has suggested a common origin for basophils and mast cells. In a case of
mast cell
transformation of chronic granulocytic leukemia, the authors have studied the morphology and
peroxidase
activity by three classical technics, of circulating mast cells and transitional "basophil/mast cells." These results were compared with those of blood and bone marrow basophils and those of cutaneous mast cells. In both mast cells and "transitional basophil/mast cells,"
peroxidase
activity was revealed in the nuclear envelope, endoplasmic reticulum, and granules. This activity was detected in unfixed cells and in tannic acid-aldehyde-fixed cells but not in 1.25% glutaraldehyde-fixed cells, where the staining appeared only in the granules. The comparison of this activity with that of normal basophils and mast cells suggests that the proliferating cells in this case possess at the same time the
peroxidase
activity of basophils and mast cells.
...
PMID:Peroxidase activity in circulating mast cells in blast crisis of chronic granulocytic leukemia. Comparative studies with basophils and cutaneous mast cells. 301 90
A simple procedure is described for eliminating non-specific staining with avidin-
peroxidase
conjugates. Murine ovaries were embedded in either paraffin wax or epoxy resin and, after blocking endogenous
peroxidase
activity, were treated with 10 micrograms/ml biotinylated Pisum sativum agglutinin. Avidin-
peroxidase
conjugates (5 micrograms/ml), diluted in standard 0.05 M tris-buffered saline, pH 7.6, containing 0.139 M NaCl, produced considerable background coloration and intense
mast cell
staining in controls without the lectin. This background diminished as the ionic strength of the buffer was raised. At 0.125 M Tris-buffered saline (containing 0.347 M NaCl) the background was completely unstained, with elimination of all binding to mast cells and only minimal loss of specific lectin binding.
...
PMID:Elimination of the non-specific binding of avidin to tissue sections. 303 94
Clinical evidence for the phagocytic capability of neoplastic feline mast cells was provided by recognition of endocytosed erythrocytes in seven of 12 cytological smears of
mast cell
neoplasms, particularly in those cells collected from splenic tumors. The capability of these neoplastic mast cells to endocytose particulate substances was also studied in vitro. Evidence is presented that under cultural conditions, feline neoplastic mast cells are capable of endocytosing a variety of substances including polystyrene latex microspheres, zymosan particles, horse spleen ferritin, salmon sperm nuclei, horseradish
peroxidase
, and carbon particles.
...
PMID:Endocytosis of erythrocytes in vivo and particulate substances in vitro by feline neoplastic mast cells. 313 17
Sixty-five canine skin neoplasms studied using immunocytochemistry, included 22 histiocytomas, 18 amelanotic melanomas, 14 cutaneous lymphosarcomas, six
mast cell
tumors, and five transmissible venereal tumors. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections were stained using the avidin-biotin-
peroxidase
complex (ABC) immunoperoxidase technique for reactivity with S-100 protein, kappa and lambda immunoglobulin light chains, alpha-1-antitrypsin, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, leukocyte common antigen (LCA), neuron-specific enolase, keratin, cytokeratin, muramidase, and vimentin. Detection of S-100, kappa and lambda light chains, neuron-specific enolase, and vimentin were most useful for screening these neoplasms. None of the markers examined was consistent in staining histiocytomas. While reactivity of S-100 (ten cases) and neuron-specific enolase (ten cases) was detected in some amelanotic melanomas, lambda light chain immunoglobulin (eight cases) was relatively consistent in cutaneous lymphomas. Mast cell neoplasms reacted with avidin and, therefore, were positive, even on negative control sections. Vimentin reacted strongly on all amelanotic melanomas and transmissible venereal tumors examined. These antibodies are helpful adjuncts in the differential diagnosis of canine skin tumors.
...
PMID:Diagnostic immunohistochemistry of canine round cell tumors. 313 15
The morphological characteristics and lectin-binding properties of
mast cell
granules from four human neurofibromata are described. Ultrastructural examination of the granules revealed that some contained dense cores, others had membranous configurations and some forms were intermediate between the two. A round electron-lucent area was present in some granules. After treatment with biotinylated lectins (10 micrograms ml-1) followed by an avidin-
peroxidase
revealing system (5 micrograms ml-1 in 0.125 M Tris-buffered saline with 0.347 M NaCl, pH 7.6),
mast cell
granules strongly bound Concanavalin A, garden pea, lentil, wheatgerm, erythro- and leuco-kidney bean lectins. This indicated the presence of abundant N-linked complex-type saccharide sequences. Soybean and peanut lectins showed only weak binding, while the presence of sparse alpha-L-fucosyl terminals was indicated by the weak binding of winged pea lectin. The staining intensity of wheatgerm lectin was considerably reduced when incubated in the presence of its specific competing sugar tri-N-acetylchitotriose. Despite a wide variety of morphological differences between granules, all showed similar staining patterns and all granules within a single cell shared the same binding characteristics.
...
PMID:An ultrastructural study of the morphology and lectin-binding properties of human mast cell granules. 319 20
Cutaneous
mast cell
degranulation in rats results in tissue inflammation, and this species has therefore provided a useful model to study the pathogenesis of late phase reactions (LPRs). The
mast cell
dependency of LPRs has been confirmed by the demonstration that isolated rat
mast cell
granules (MCGs), when injected intradermally into rat skin, induce patterns of tissue inflammation similar to those seen after skin testing with anti-IgE antibody. Rat LPRs are neutrophil dependent, and, further, MCG-derived inflammatory factors can chemically attract rat neutrophils in vitro. To further study the relationships among MCGs, tissue inflammation, and neutrophil function, luminol-dependent chemiluminescence (CL) responses of rat peritoneal-elicited neutrophils in response to opsonized zymosan and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) in the presence and absence of MCGs were analyzed. When MCGs (1.0, 10, and 100 micrograms/ml) alone were added to neutrophil suspensions, a rapid concentration-dependent increase in baseline CL responses was observed; these increases (maximum of sixfold) were modest, varied with cell concentrations, and followed different time courses compared with those seen after addition of preopsonized zymosan (0.5 mg/ml) (50-fold increases that peaked in 4 to 8 minutes). However, if neutrophils were preincubated (15 minutes) in the presence of MCGs, the CL response to opsonized zymosan (1.25 mg/ml) was significantly and synergistically enhanced compared with the response seen with MCGs alone. Similar but less pronounced effects were also noted after cell activation with PMA (2.5 and 25 ng/ml). To determine which component of the MCG was responsible for this enhancing activity, additional experiments were performed. Enhancement was still observed, albeit less intense, if MCGs were prepared membrane free and washed free of readily dissociable mediators such as histamine. Histamine (10(-6) and 10(-5) mol/L) had no enhancing effect nor did preparations of MCG membranes. MCG solubilization (3 mol/L NH4HCO3) revealed that the enhancing activity resided completely in the high molecular weight (greater than 10,000 daltons) fraction. Heat treatment of the granules and sodium azide preincubation completely abolished the enhancing effect. Exogenous horseradish
peroxidase
, at
peroxidase
activity levels contained within the MCGs (1 x 10(-4) to 10(-2) U/ml), reproduced the enhancing effect. After opsonized zymosan activation, neutrophils generated less H2O2 and superoxide anion in the presence of MCGs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mast cell granule enhancement of neutrophil chemiluminescence responses. 334 48
The purpose of this study was to determine if human
mast cell
granules contain non-repeating oligosaccharide sequences. The binding of lectins to human
mast cell
granules was studied using a panel of 11 lectins variously selective for both N- and O-linked oligosaccharide sequences. The tissues were principally derived from cutaneous neurofibromata and benign and malignant breast diseases, that is, readily available human material with a known high content of mast cells. Lectin-binding sites in the formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded or resin-embedded material was visualized by means of biotinylated lectins and an avidin-
peroxidase
technique for light microscopy. The results indicate that human
mast cell
granules contain abundant N-linked sequences, but few or no O-linked residues. These sequences appear to be mostly in the form of non-bisected highly branched or smaller biantennate sequences, although variable positive binding with erythrophytohaemagglutinin was observed, indicating some degree of bisection.
...
PMID:Lectin histochemistry of the mast cell: a light microscopical study. 341 Jul 38
An autopsy case of systemic mastocytosis without cutaneous involvement in a 76-year-old woman was described. The patient presented with general malaise, chest and epigastric discomfort, flushing of the face and progressive hepatosplenomegaly, and she terminated in hemorrhagic complications of DIC within 2 months. There was neither rash nor urticaria pigmentosa recognizable in the entire course. The diagnosis was made by the histologic identification of abnormal aggregates of mast cells in a bone marrow aspirate. These
mast cell
granules were chloroacetate esterase-positive,
peroxidase
-negative, and electronmicroscopically they were composed of fine granular materials containing variable numbers of lamellar structures. At autopsy, diffuse infiltration of the mast cells was found in the liver, spleen, bone marrow, lymph nodes, lungs, kidneys, stomach, and adrenal glands.
...
PMID:Systemic mastocytosis without cutaneous involvement. 355 89
The role of mast cells in induction of uterine eosinophilia was investigated by using genetically
mast cell
-deficient (WB X C57BL/6)F1-W/Wv (hereafter called WBB6F1-W/Wv) mice. The injection of estradiol-17 beta (0.16 micrograms/g body weight) increased the
peroxidase
activity and eosinophil number in the uteri of castrated WBB6F1-W/Wv and WBB6F1-+/+ mice. Since no significant differences were detectable between these two type of mice, mast cells did not seem to be essential for the estrogen-induced uterine eosinophilia, at least in mice.
...
PMID:Estrogen-induced increase in eosinophil number and peroxidase activity in uterus of genetically mast cell-deficient W/Wv mice. 408 34
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>