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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A rat model of inflammation was used to investigate the biological effects of thrombin. The thrombin-specific inhibitor Hirulog markedly attentuated the carrageenin-induced edema of the paw of the rat. Injection of thrombin into the paw also produced edema. The effect of thrombin was due to activation of its receptor; a
thrombin receptor
activating peptide (TRAP) reproduced the effects of thrombin in causing edema. TRAP also increased vascular permeability as demonstrated by extravasation of Evans blue and 125I-labeled serum albumin. The release of bioactive amines played an important role in mediating the TRAP-induced edema; the serotonin/histamine antagonist cryproheptadine and the histamine H2 receptor antagonist cimetidine reduced significantly the edema caused by TRAP. Treatment of rats with the
mast cell
degranulator 48/80 to deplete these cells of their stores of histamine and serotonin abolished completely the ability of TRAP to produce edema. Histochemical examination confirmed that TRAP treatment led to
mast cell
degranulation. Thus, it has been possible to demonstrate that thrombin acts as an inflammatory mediator in vivo by activating its receptor, which in turn leads to release of vasoactive amines from mast cells.
...
PMID:Thrombin functions as an inflammatory mediator through activation of its receptor. 864 86
Tryptase is a serine protease secreted by mast cells that is able to activate other cells. In the present studies we have tested whether these responses could be mediated by thrombin receptors or PAR-2, two G-protein-coupled receptors that are activated by proteolysis. When added to a peptide corresponding to the N terminus of PAR-2, tryptase cleaved the peptide at the activating site, but at higher concentrations it also cleaved downstream, as did trypsin, a known activator of PAR-2. Thrombin, factor Xa, plasmin, urokinase, plasma kallikrein, and tissue kallikrein had no effect. Tryptase also cleaved the analogous
thrombin receptor
peptide at the activating site but less efficiently. When added to COS-1 cells expressing either receptor, tryptase stimulated phosphoinositide hydrolysis. With PAR-2, this response was half-maximal at 1 nM tryptase and could be inhibited by the tryptase inhibitor, APC366, or by antibodies to tryptase and PAR-2. When added to human endothelial cells, which normally express PAR-2 and thrombin receptors, or keratinocytes, which express only PAR-2, tryptase caused an increase in cytosolic Ca2+. However, when added to platelets or CHRF-288 cells, which express thrombin receptors but not PAR-2, tryptase caused neither aggregation nor increased Ca2+. These results show that 1) tryptase has the potential to activate both PAR-2 and thrombin receptors; 2) for PAR-2, this potential is realized, although cleavage at secondary sites may limit activation, particularly at higher tryptase concentrations; and 3) in contrast, although tryptase clearly activates thrombin receptors in COS-1 cells, it does not appear to cleave endogenous thrombin receptors in platelets or CHRF-288 cells. These distinctions correlate with the observed differences in the rate of cleavage of the PAR-2 and
thrombin receptor
peptides by tryptase. Tryptase is the first protease other than trypsin that has been shown to activate human PAR-2. Its presence within
mast cell
granules places it in tissues where PAR-2 is expressed but trypsin is unlikely to reach.
...
PMID:Interactions of mast cell tryptase with thrombin receptors and PAR-2. 902 Jan 12
The proteinase-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2) is the second member of a putative larger class of proteolytically activated receptors that mediate cell activation events by receptor cleavage or synthetic peptidomimetics corresponding to the newly generated N-terminus. To further study the previously identified mitogenic effects of PAR-2, we used the interleukin-3 (IL-3)-dependent murine lymphoid cell line, BaF3, for generation of stable cell lines expressing PAR-2 (BaF3/PAR-2) or the noncleavable PAR-2 mutant PAR-2(Arg36 --> Ala36). Only BaF3 cells expressing either wild-type or mutated receptor exhibited mitogenic responses when grown in IL-3-deficient media supplemented with PAR-2 activating peptide (SLIGRL, PAR39-44). This effect was dose dependent with an EC50 of approximately 80 micromol/L, sustained at 24, 48, and 72 hours, and was also demonstrable using
thrombin receptor
peptide TR42-47. Because tryptase shares approximately 70% homology with trypsin (previously shown to activate PAR-2), we studied recombinantly expressed forms of alpha- and beta-tryptases as candidate protease agonists for PAR-2. Hydrolytic activity of the chromogenic substrate tosyl-glycyl-prolyl-argly-4-nitroanilide acetate was present as a sharp peak at Mr approximately 130, confirming the presence of secretable and functionally active homotetrameric alpha- and beta-tryptases in transfected COS-1 cells. Dose-dependent proliferative responses were evident using either secreted form of tryptase with maximal responses seen at approximately 3 pmol/L (0.1 U/L). Receptor proteolysis was necessary and sufficient for mitogenesis because active site-blocked tryptase failed to induce this response, and proliferative responses were abrogated in BaF3 cells expressing PAR-2(Arg36 --> Ala36). These results specifically identify both forms of
mast cell
tryptases as serine protease agonists for PAR-2 and have implications for elucidating molecular mechanisms regulating cellular activation events mediated by proteases generated during inflammatory, fibrinolytic, or hemostatic-regulated pathways.
...
PMID:Mitogenic responses mediated through the proteinase-activated receptor-2 are induced by expressed forms of mast cell alpha- or beta-tryptases. 935 58
1. To clarify the role of the first
thrombin receptor
/protease-activated receptor (PAR)-1 in an inflammatory process, we tested and characterized the effect of intraplantar (i.pl.) administration of the highly specific PAR-1 agonist TFLLR-NH2 in rat hindpaw. 2. TFLLR-NH2 administered i.pl. at 0.01-0.03 micromol per paw enhanced vascular permeability in the hindpaw and produced paw oedema in a dose-dependent manner. This effect was almost completely abolished by repeated pretreatment with compound 48/80 to deplete inflammatory mediators in mast cells. 3. The NO synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester or N-iminoethyl-L-ornithine, preadministered i.pl., stereospecifically potentiated the i.pl. TFLLR-NH2-induced permeability increase, while the NO donor sodium nitroprusside or NOC-18, given i.pl., suppressed the effect of TFLLR-NH2. 4. These findings demonstrate that specific activation of PAR-1 produces increased vascular permeability accompanied by oedema formation in the rat hindpaw, predominantly via
mast cell
degranulation, and that endogenous and exogenous NO plays a protective role in the PAR-1-mediated inflammatory event.
...
PMID:Enhancement of vascular permeability by specific activation of protease-activated receptor-1 in rat hindpaw: a protective role of endogenous and exogenous nitric oxide. 1037 30
The effect of a
thrombin receptor
agonist peptide (TRAP-6) on the release of nitric oxide (NO) and platelet activating factor (PAF) from resting and calcium-ionophore (A23187)-activated rat peritoneal mast cells (RPMC) was studied using a platelet aggregation bioassay. RPMC spontaneously released NO, which inhibited TRAP-6-, ADP-, and PAF-stimulated platelet aggregation. This effect of NO was abolished by the addition of an NO binding agent, oxyhemoglobin (oxyHb), to the platelet suspension. The RPMC-induced suppression of platelet aggregation was completely inhibited by the NO-synthase inhibitor L-NAME. TRAP-6 and its high affinity analog haTRAP stimulated the rapid release of NO from RPMC. The effect of TRAP-6 was inhibited by pretreatment of the RPMC with L-NAME or with the inhibitor of the constitutive NO-synthase isoform (cNOS) calmidazolium. TRAP-6 inhibited PAF release from A23187-activated RPMC via an NO-dependent mechanism. Platelet aggregation induced by PAF release from activated RPMC was also confirmed in experiments using the PAF receptor antagonist ginkgolide B. Thus, TRAP-6 is a rapidly acting modulator of
mast cell
reactivity; it stimulates NO release and inhibits PAF secretion.
...
PMID:Modulation of mast cell activity by a peptide agonist of the thrombin receptor: role of nitric oxide. 1039 81