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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (mast cell)
14,925 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the first part of the study we analyzed the morphology of mast cells in autoimmune thyroiditis of BB/W rats. In the early stage of thyroiditis mast cells showed exocytosis of granules into the interstitium; this was associated with disorganization of the extracellular matrix and the appearance of a translucent ground substance in stroma. Mast cells were not seen in the mononuclear infiltrates in the later stages of thyroiditis. In order to further study the effect of mast cells on the extracellular matrix, we evaluated the effect of mast cell lysate and purified chymase on the matrix of cultured thyroid cells. Mast cells were obtained from peritoneal cavity; mast cell chymase was purified by anion exchange chromatography. After exposure to chymase there was a reduction of pericellular fibronectin in cultured thyroid cells, while laminin in matrix remained unchanged. Similarly, as found by gel electrophoresis, soluble fibronectin and vitronectin were digested by chymase in the reaction mixture. Cell attachment on both fibronectin and vitronectin was significantly decreased upon exposure of matrix proteins to chymase. The effects of chymase were abolished by enzyme inhibitor phenylmethane sulfonyl fluoride. These data suggest that mast cells possess proteolytic enzymes capable of digesting different host proteins which may have a role in the thyroid cell interaction with the surrounding matrix.
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PMID:The effect of mast cell chymase on extracellular matrix: studies in autoimmune thyroiditis and in cultured thyroid cells. 128 41

Human mast cells have been purified from uterine tissues, and their surface marker profile and function have been evaluated as part of ongoing studies of mast cell heterogeneity. Using a panel of antibodies, purified uterine mast cells (UMC; 81% +/- 7% purity, n = 10) were analyzed by immunofluorescence and flow cytometry for surface expression of various antigens. Consistent with previous analyses of mast cells from other tissues, UMC expressed HLA class I, IgE, c-kit receptor, CD9, CD33, CD43, CD45, and CD54, while CD11a, CD11b, CD14, CD16, CD23, and CD64 were not detected. Unlike other mast cells, UMC expressed CD11c/CD18 (p150,95) and CD32 (Fc gamma RII). Additional antigens not previously studied on mast cells included the selectin LECAM-1 (Leu-8) and several beta 1 and beta 3 integrins; expression of very late activation antigen-4 (VLA-4) (CD49d/CD29), VLA-5 (CD49e/CD29), and the vitronectin receptor (CD51/CD61) was seen. Functional studies showed that treatment of human umbilical vein endothelial cells with interleukin-1 (5 ng/mL for 4 hours) resulted in a twofold to threefold increase in adhesiveness for UMC. Purification procedures did not alter histamine release responses to anti-IgE or the calcium ionophore A23187, and treatment of UMC with an anti-CD32 monoclonal antibody (IV.3) did not induce histamine release or alter anti-IgE-induced release. These data suggest that UMC may possess unique phenotypic characteristics, and support the concept of mast cell heterogeneity.
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PMID:Immunophenotyping and functional analysis of purified human uterine mast cells. 137 Jun 42

The adhesive interactions of activated mast cells with the extracellular matrix play an important role in anchorage and cellular motility. In this report we demonstrate that IL-3-dependent bone marrow-derived mast cells adhere to plate-bound vitronectin with high affinity in a saturable and dose-dependent manner. This adhesion interaction is unique in that it does not require prior mast cell activation through Fc epsilon RI or after treatment with PMA. It is inhibited by divalent cation chelation and by competitive inhibition with a synthetic Arginine-Glycine-Aspartate-Serine tetrapeptide. Polyclonal antisera for alpha v beta 3, an integrin known to bind vitronectin, inhibits attachment to plate-bound vitronectin in a dose-dependent manner. Comparison of the adhesion interactions for vitronectin, fibronectin, and laminin indicate that adhesion to vitronectin is greater than that seen with either fibronectin or laminin, either in the presence or absence of PMA. FACS analysis using a monoclonal hamster anti-murine vitronectin receptor (alpha v) antibody followed by a fluorescein-conjugated rabbit anti-hamster IgG revealed no change in surface vitronectin receptor expression after Fc epsilon RI-mediated cell activation. Proliferation assays with correction for cell viability revealed a 25% increase in cell number above the maximal IL-3 response over a 24-h period of adhesion to a vitronectin-coated surface and a 41% increase over 96 h of adhesion to vitronectin. Binding to plate-bound vitronectin was not able to sustain cell viability in the absence of IL-3. Thus, IL-3-dependent bone marrow-derived mast cells adhere to vitronectin, an extracellular matrix protein present throughout connective tissues. This interaction generates a signal that results in the augmentation of the maximal IL-3-dependent mast cell proliferative response, thus demonstrating at least one way in which the interaction between mast cells and extracellular matrix alter the biologic responsiveness of the mast cell.
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PMID:IL-3-dependent mast cells attach to plate-bound vitronectin. Demonstration of augmented proliferation in response to signals transduced via cell surface vitronectin receptors. 138 29

Integrins are multifunctional recognition molecules and are expressed on various hematopoietic cells. In the present study expression of integrins on the cell surface of human mast cells and human basophils was investigated by using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) and indirect immunofluorescence. Human mast cells were obtained from lung (n = 5), uterus (n = 5) and skin (n = 4). Human blood basophils were obtained from normal donors (n = 2). In addition, HMC-1 cells (human mast cell line) and KU-812 cells (a basophil cell line) were analyzed. Primary mast cells were found to react with mAbs directed against the common beta chain of beta 1 integrins (CD 29), the alpha chain of VLA-4 (CD 49 d) and VLA-5 (CD 49 e), the beta chain of beta 3 integrins (CD 61), and the alpha chain of the vitronectin receptor (VNR) (CD 51). Mast cells were not recognized by mAbs to beta 2 integrins (CD 18, CD 11 a, CD 11 b, CD 11 c), the alpha chain of VLA-2 (CD 49 b), and VLA-6 (CD 49 f). No differences in expression of integrins on human mast cells obtained from different organs were found. HMC-1 cells and primary mast cells expressed an almost identical pattern of integrins. Human basophils and KU-812 cells were found to react with mAbs directed against beta 1-integrins (CD 29, CD 49 b, CD 49 d, CD 49 e) and beta 2-integrins (CD 18, CD 11 a, CD 11 b, CD 11 c). Together, mast cells and blood basophils express a unique pattern of integrins. These cell surface structures may be involved in the distribution of basophils and tissue mast cells and their accumulation and function in inflammed tissues.
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PMID:Differential expression of cell surface integrins on human mast cells and human basophils. 164 54

Steel (SI) and white spotting (W) loci encode steel factor (c-kit ligand) and the c-kit tyrosine kinase receptor, respectively. Mutations at these loci affect migration and differentiation of primordial germ cells, neural crest-derived melanoblasts, and hematopoietic cells. In these processes, cell adhesion molecules are hypothesized to be crucial. We have examined the role of steel factor and c-kit in cell-extracellular matrix adhesion using bone marrow-derived mast cells as a model system. Steel factor stimulates mast cells to bind to fibronectin and, to a lesser extent, to vitronectin, whereas interleukin-3 and interleukin-4, which are also mast cell growth factors, do not. Activation of adhesiveness is transient, occurs at concentrations of steel factor 100-fold lower than required for growth stimulation, and requires the integrin VLA-5. Mast cells from c-kit mutant mice adhere to fibronectin on stimulation with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), but not on stimulation with steel factor, indicating that stimulation of integrin adhesiveness requires activation of the c-kit protein tyrosine kinase. By contrast, c-kit mutant and wild-type mast cells adhere equally well to COS cells expressing membrane-anchored steel factor, showing that the kinase activity of c-kit is not required for adhesion directly mediated by c-kit. Our findings suggest that regulation of adhesion is an important biologic function of steel factor.
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PMID:Steel factor and c-kit regulate cell-matrix adhesion. 750 7

We have determined that several chemokines induce mast cell migration in vitro. This directed migration is dependent on the presence of particular extracellular matrix proteins and the activation status of the cells. Mast cell haptotactic responses were observed in response to various chemokines on vitronectin-, laminin-, and fibronectin-coated filters. Unstimulated mast cells were chemoattracted only by monocyte chemotactic protein-1 and RANTES on vitronectin-coated and, to a lesser extent, laminin-coated filters, whereas IgE-activated mast cells migrated in response to monocyte chemotactic protein-1, regulated on activation normal T expressed and secreted, platelet factor-4, and macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha on all three matrix proteins. No significant migration was observed on collagen type IV-coated or uncoated filters. Mast cell migration in response to chemokines on extracellular matrices and its enhancement by IgE-dependent activation provide a mechanism by which cells may be drawn to sites of inflammation. Chemokine-induced mast cell recruitment may be particularly relevant in host defense responses to parasitic infections, allergic reactions, Jones-Mote reactions, and in wound healing.
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PMID:Bone marrow-derived murine mast cells migrate, but do not degranulate, in response to chemokines. 753 69

We studied the effect of mast cell chymase on the interaction between osteoblasts and extracellular matrix. Chymase was purified from mast cell lysate by anion exchange chromatography. Osteoblasts were isolated from rat calvarias by collagenase digestion. Incubation of osteoblasts with mast cell lysate (40-170 micrograms/ml) or purified chymase (8-32 micrograms/ml) resulted in changes in cell-matrix interaction and cell morphology. Osteoblasts treated with chymase also showed a gradual detachment from the artificial substrata and from the biomatrix (collagen-digested rib fragment). A similar effect of mast cell chymase on the osteoblasts was found in vitro on endosteum of an intact parietal bone. Neutral protease inhibitors abolished the effect of both crude and purified enzyme preparations on the cell-matrix interaction. Mast cell chymase had no effect on osteoblast viability. The effect of enzyme on osteoblast proliferation was studied with lower concentrations of enzyme (0.2 micrograms/ml) in order to avoid cell detachment; there was no effect on either the metaphase index or on the number of cells after 5 days of incubation with chymase. Osteoblast attachment and cell spreading on different matrix proteins (fibronectin, vitronectin, extract of noncollagenous matrix proteins from rat bone) were significantly altered by their pretreatment with chymase. Matrix fibronectin of osteoblasts in culture as well as soluble vitronectin and fibronectin were digested by rat mast cell chymase. Our data suggest that mast cells through action of neutral protease chymase may alter molecules in extracellular matrix that are important in osteoblast adhesion, cell spreading, maintenance of cell morphology, and, most likely, cell function.
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PMID:Interaction of osteoblasts with extracellular matrix: effect of mast cell chymase. 768 44

Adhesion molecules of the integrin family are implicated not only in leukocyte migration but also in leukocyte activation. Here we characterize the expression and function of fibronectin receptor integrins on rat mast cells. A rat basophilic leukemia cell line (RBL-2H3) and phorbol ester-stimulated rat peritoneal mast cells adhered to fibronectin (FN), vitronectin and fibrinogen. These mast cells expressed fibronectin receptor integrins, including very late antigen (VLA)-4, VLA-5 and vitronectin receptor (VNR), as estimated by immunofluorescent staining and inhibition of FN adherence by newly established mAbs reactive with the rat alpha 4 (MR alpha 4-1), alpha 5 (HM alpha 5-1) or beta 3 (HM beta 3-1) chains of the integrin molecules. The beta-hexosaminidase release, a marker for mast cell degranulation, triggered by high affinity IgE receptor (Fc epsilon RI)-mediated stimulation, was enhanced by adhesion of RBL-2H3 cells to either immobilized FN, MR alpha 4-1, HM alpha 5-1 or HM beta 3-1. This FN enhancement of beta-hexosaminidase release was inhibited by soluble MR alpha 4-1, HM alpha 5-1 and HM beta 3-1 as well as by GRGDSP and DELPQLVTLPHPNHLGPEILDVPST peptides which abrogate VLA-5/VNR and VLA-4 binding to FN respectively. In vivo, passive cutaneous anaphylaxis induced by IgE anti-DNP and DNP-BSA was inhibited by concurrent s.c. injection of MR alpha 4-1, HM alpha 5-1 and HM beta 3-1. These results demonstrate that FN receptor integrins expressed on rat mast cells play an important role in regulating mast cell activation both in vitro and in vivo.
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PMID:Expression and function of fibronectin binding integrins on rat mast cells. 773 20

Interactions of cells with their extracellular matrix (ECM) are central to tissue-specific migration, localization, and function of migratory cells. Since mast cells circulate as immature precursor cells and home to tissues in a characteristic distribution, with increases in various disease states, we used the immature human mast cell line HMC-1 as a model to investigate the poorly understood mast cell-ECM interactions in humans. Functional adhesion studies showed that HMC-1 cells spontaneously adhere to fibronectin and laminin (80% at 6 and 12 microgram/ml, respectively) and to collagen type I and III (50% at 20 microgram/ml), whereas binding to vitronectin and collagen type IV required cell activation by phorbol myristate acetate. HMC-1 cells did not adhere to hyaluronic acid. Moreover, both fibronectin and laminin supported pronounced cytoplasmatic spreading with formation of isolated lamellipodia, whereas these cells exhibited a round cell shape on collagen and vitronectin, as shown by scanning electron microscopy. On flow cytometric analysis, HMC-1 cells expressed several adhesion molecules including the integrins beta 1, alpha 2 through alpha 6, alpha v, and alpha v beta 5, as well as CD44. Adhesion to fibronectin and vitronectin was found to be divalent cation- and arginine-glycine-aspartic acid-dependent, and could be blocked by antibodies to beta 1 or alpha 5, and alpha v or alpha v beta 5, respectively. In contrast, binding to laminin and collagen could not be blocked by monoclonal antibodies to any of the cell surface adhesion receptors expressed. Our results show that immature mast cells are able to modify their adhesive behavior in response to various ECM proteins and activating stimuli, and that this phenomenon is partly integrin mediated. These findings may be important for our understanding of the mechanisms leading to tissue-specific localization of mast cells.
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PMID:Interactions of immature human mast cells with extracellular matrix: expression of specific adhesion receptors and their role in cell binding to matrix proteins. 864 90

Accumulation of basophils and mast cells in airway tissues during allergic and allergic-type inflammatory responses, including asthma, is one of the hallmarks of these disease processes. Contributing mechanisms include induction of differentiation of the cell lineages, including production of differentiation-specific cytokines for these lineages within the tissues; enhanced survival of the cells during inflammation within the airways; attraction to tissue factors such as extracellular matrix proteins (fibronectin and vitronectin) in inflammation; and heterogeneity of the cells and their products during both early- and late-phase responses within the inflamed airways. Whether the mast cell and basophil can be simplistically assigned a role for early- and late-phase responses, respectively, and whether the cells are both necessary and sufficient for the ongoing asthmatic response, including the development of bronchial hyper-responsiveness, remain to be studied. The relative contributions of basophils, mast cells, eosinophils and T cells to the inflammatory process and production of proinflammatory and hemopoietic cytokines within inflamed airway tissues remain subjects of active investigation.
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PMID:Basophils and mast cells in airway inflammation and asthma. 975 16


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