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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
c-kit
receptor is a tyrosine-kinase transmembrane receptor first identified as an oncogene in the HZ4-feline leukemia virus and later found to be important in hematopoiesis in mice. The ligand for this receptor (Steel factor) can stimulate hematopoiesis both in vitro and in vivo. To study the pattern of
c-kit
receptor expression in normal human hematopoietic progenitor cells, we prepared a monoclonal antibody (9B9) against human
c-kit
receptor by using a synthetic peptide (amino acids 476-501) from the extracellular domain of
c-kit
receptor to immunize Balb/c mice. Monoclonal antibody 9B9 bound to recombinant
c-kit
protein, the erythroleukemic line HEL, the megakaryocytic line MEG-01, and the murine
mast cell
line P815. Monoclonal antibody 9B9 also bound to the surface of the CD7+CD3-CD4-CD8- T cell lymphoid cell lines DU.528 and HSB2T, and also to 1 to 4% of normal bone-marrow cells. The majority (67 +/- 6%) of CD34+ bone-marrow progenitor cells coexpressed
c-kit
receptor. Flow-cytometry analysis of immature CD3-CD4-CD8- (triple-negative) thymocytes indicated 30 +/- 9.5% expressed the
c-kit
receptor, and thymidine incorporation assay revealed that the receptor is functional. Indirect fluorescent microscopy of human thymic tissue, using a monoclonal antibody against Steel factor, revealed its presence on scattered mononuclear cells within the intralobular septae and the subcapsular cortex, which are regions where the triple-negative thymocytes are also localized. These data provide evidence that the
c-kit
receptor is present on human hematopoietic bone marrow and intrathymic T cell progenitor cells, and that it likely plays a role in early T cell lymphopoiesis.
...
PMID:The c-kit proto-oncogene receptor is expressed on a subset of human CD3-CD4-CD8- (triple-negative) thymocytes. 752 82
Mast cells may be cultured from human peripheral blood in the presence of recombinant human stem cell factor (rhSCF). The characteristics of the cells in peripheral blood that give rise to mast cells are unknown. Because
mast cell
precursors in human marrow are CD34+, human peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with mastocytosis and normal controls were sorted on the basis of CD34 expression and the positive and negative cell populations were cultured in rhSCF, recombinant human interleukin-3 (rhIL-3), or both for 6 weeks. Cell cultures were examined every 2 weeks for total and
mast cell
number and cell differential using Wright Giemsa and acid toluidine blue stains and antibodies to mast cell tryptase and chymase, cell-associated histamine, and expression of CD34,
c-kit
, Fc epsilon RI, and Fc gamma RII using flow cytometric analysis. The ultrastructural anatomy of mast cells was examined by electron microscopy. Peripheral blood CD34+ cells cultured in rhSCF with or without rhIL-3 gave rise to cell cultures consisting of greater than 80% mast cells by 6 weeks. CD34+ cells cultured in rhIL-3 alone did not give rise to mast cells, whereas rhIL-3 plus rhSCF increased the final
mast cell
number eightfold when compared with cells cultured in rhSCF alone. Mast cells increased concomitantly with a decrease in large undifferentiated mononuclear cells. CD34- cells did not give rise to mast cells. Histamine content per cell at 6 weeks was approximately 5 pg. Electron microscopy of 4-week cultures showed immature mast cells containing predominantly tryptase-positive granules that were either homogeneous or contained lattice structures, partial scroll patterns, or central dense cores and mixtures of vesicles, fine granular material, and particles. The CD34+ population at day 0 expressed Kit (65%) and Fc gamma RII (95%), but not Fc epsilon RI, by fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis. At 6 weeks, CD34+-derived mast cells exhibited Fc epsilon RI in addition to Kit and Fc gamma RII, and were negative for CD34 antigen. Patients with mastocytosis showed a higher number of mast cells per CD34+ cell cultured compared with normal controls. Thus, the
mast cell
precursor in human peripheral blood is CD34+/Fc epsilon RI- and gives rise to mast cells in the presence of rhSCF with or without rhIL-3, and the number of mast cells arising per CD34+ cell in culture is greater when the CD34+ cells are obtained from patients with mastocytosis compared with normal subjects.
...
PMID:Mast cells cultured from the peripheral blood of normal donors and patients with mastocytosis originate from a CD34+/Fc epsilon RI- cell population. 752 30
The mi locus of mice encodes a novel member of the basic-helix-loop-helix-leucine zipper protein family of transcription factors (hereafter called mi factor). In addition to microphthalmus, osteopetrosis, and lack of melanocytes, mice of mi/mi genotype are deficient in mast cells. Since the
c-kit
receptor tyrosine kinase plays an important role in the development of mast cells, and since the
c-kit
expression by cultured mast cells from mi/mi mice is deficient in both mRNA and protein levels, the
mast cell
deficiency of mi/mi mice has been attributed at least in part to the deficient expression of
c-kit
. However, it remained to be examined whether the
c-kit
expression was also deficient in tissues of mi/mi mice. In the present study, we examined the
c-kit
expression by mi/mi skin mast cells using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. Moreover, we examined the
c-kit
expression by various cells other than mast cells in tissues of mi/mi mice. We found that the
c-kit
expression was deficient in mast cells but not in erythroid precursors, testicular germ cells, and neurons of mi/mi mice. This suggested that the regulation of the
c-kit
transcription by the mi factor was dependent on cell types. Mice of mi/mi genotype appeared to be a useful model to analyze the function of transcription factors in the whole-animal level.
...
PMID:Cell type-specific deficiency of c-kit gene expression in mutant mice of mi/mi genotype. 752 30
The generation of murine mast cells is supported by several cytokines, and
mast cell
lines are frequently established in long-term cultures of normal murine marrow cells. In contrast, growth of human mast cells was initially dependent on coculture with murine fibroblasts. The growth factor produced by murine fibroblasts and required to observe differentiation of human mast cells is attributable in part to stem cell factor (SCF). However, other factors are likely involved. We have previously shown that the combination of SCF and interleukin-3 (IL-3) efficiently sustains proliferation and differentiation of colony-forming cells (CFCs) from pre-CFC enriched from human umbilical cord blood by CD34+ selection. With periodic medium changes and the addition of fresh growth factors, five consecutive cultures of different cord blood samples gave rise to differentiated cells and CFCs for more than 2 months. Although differentiated cells continued to be generated for more than 5 months, CFCs were no longer detectable by day 50 of culture. The cells have the morphology of immature mast cells, are Toluidine blue positive, are karyotypically normal, are CD33+, CD34-, CD45+,
c-kit
-, and c-fms-, and die in the absence of either SCF or IL-3. These cells do not form colonies in semisolid culture and are propagated in liquid culture stimulated with SCF and IL-3 at a seeding concentration of no less than 10(4) cells/mL. At refeedings, the cultures contain a high number (> 50%) of dead cells and have a doubling time ranging from 5 to 12 days. This suggests that subsets of the cell population die because of a requirement for a growth factor other than SCF or IL-3. These results indicate that the combination of cord blood progenitor and stem cells, plus a cocktail of growth factors including SCF and IL-3, is capable with high efficiency of giving rise in serum-deprived culture to human mast cells that behave like factor-dependent cell lines. These cells may represent a useful tool for studies of human
mast cell
differentiation and leukemia.
...
PMID:Long-term generation of human mast cells in serum-free cultures of CD34+ cord blood cells stimulated with stem cell factor and interleukin-3. 752 46
Autonomous, factor-independent growth and differentiation of malignant cells in preleukemic and leukemic disease states is a well-recognized phenomenon and is often associated with a poor prognosis. Mast cells are distinct hematopoietic cells and express a unique profile of antigens. Growth and differentiation of normal mast cells is dependent on mast cell growth factor (MGF), the ligand of the
c-kit
protooncogene product. In this study, we screened for
mast cell
-lineage involvement in 52 patients suffering from myeloid leukemias, myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), systemic mastocytosis, or other diseases by probing for
mast cell
-related molecules (
c-kit
, tryptase, histamine, and MGF) and by analyzing kit ligand/MGF-independent growth of mast cells in long-term suspension culture. Of the 52 patients tested, 2 patients with refractory anemia with excess of blast cells in transformation and 1 patient suffering from chronic myeloid leukemia blast crisis (CML-BC) were diagnosed as mastocytic disease. These patients were characterized by complex chromosomal abnormalities, splenomegaly, high percentages of circulating metachromatic cells (5% to 25%), high levels of cellular tryptase (> 10 ng/10(5) peripheral blood mononuclear cells/mL) and a tryptase/histamine (ng:ng) ratio greater than 1. The metachromatic cells expressed the mast-cell-related surface antigen
c-kit
, but not basophil-related antigens (CD11b, CDw17). Furthermore, in these 3 patients, spontaneous, MGF-independent growth of mast cells along with spontaneous synthesis of tryptase was demonstrable in long-term culture. No autocrine production, paracrine production, or overproduction of MGF was found. The spontaneous growth of mast cells could neither be abbrogated by addition of monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) to
c-kit
nor by MoAbs against MGF (< 5% inhibition), whereas factor (MGF)-dependent differentiation of mast cells in these patients could be abbrogated by MoAbs to
c-kit
or MoAbs to MGF (> 70% inhibition, P < .001). In addition, serum MGF levels in these patients were within the normal range and MGF could not be detected in cell-free culture supernatants. All 3 patients showed rapid progression of disease and had a survival time of less than 1 year. In conclusion, we describe a unique form of transformation in MDS and CML-BC characterized by
mast cell
lineage involvement and factor-independent differentiation of mast cells. This form of leukemic transformation has to be delineated from chronic myeloid leukemia with basophilia or basophil crisis, from primary mast cell leukemia, and from monocytic leukemias and myelodysplastic disorders associated with basophilia.
...
PMID:Kit ligand/mast cell growth factor-independent differentiation of mast cells in myelodysplasia and chronic myeloid leukemic blast crisis. 752 72
Interaction with stromal cells is known to be crucial for growth and differentiation of hematopoietic cells. To characterize adhesion molecules involved in this interaction, we examined adhesion of a panel of lymphoid, myeloid, and
mast cell
lines with stromal cells. We found that very late antigen-4 (VLA-4) and vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1) were major adhesion molecules in lymphoid and myeloid cells, whereas myeloma cells adhered to stromal cells through hyaluronate. We investigated regulation of VLA-4 during differentiation of myeloid cells using a neutrophil precursor cell line, L-G3. Differentiation of neutrophils induced by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor was accompanied with down-regulation of VLA-4. Induced L-G3 cells adhered to stromal cells in proportion to the expression of VLA-4. Mast cells used two mechanisms to adhere to fibroblasts and stromal cells. They adhered to fibronectin through VLA-5 when stimulated with steel factor and also directly to membrane-anchored steel factor through
c-kit
.
...
PMID:Adhesion molecules in hematopoietic cells. 752 78
We examined the expression of Fc epsilon-RI and Fc gamma-RII/III on mouse bone marrow cells enriched for hematopoietic progenitors including
mast cell
progenitors. Bone marrow cells were depleted of mature hematopoietic lineages and a primitive population of cells that express the proto-oncogene
c-kit
(KIT+ lineage- cells) was isolated. KIT+ lineage- cells stain positively using the Ab 2.4G2, indicating surface expression of Fc gamma-RII and/or Fc gamma-RIII. Fluorescent staining of intracytoplasmic domains of Fc gamma-RII and Fc gamma-RIII revealed that these cells express primarily Fc gamma-RII on their surface. KIT+ lineage- cells did express Fc gamma RIII alpha-chain protein, but predominately in the nuclear/perinuclear area. We could not detect surface expression of Fc epsilon-RI by KIT+ lineage- cells, although a heterogeneous population of KIT- cells does bind IgE with high affinity and may reflect cells of the basophilic lineage. KIT+ lineage- cells cultured with SCF and IL-3 generate numerous mast cells, whereas equivalent numbers of KIT- cells or naive bone marrow cells do not. In these cultures, surface expression of Fc epsilon-RI is detected on a small number of cells by day 3 of culture with increased surface expression levels correlating roughly with metachromatic granule formation. The fact that Fc gamma-RIII and Fc epsilon-RI are not expressed on the cell surface of KIT+ lineage- cells but appear later in hematopoietic development makes it unlikely that these receptors influence early hematopoietic differentiation. The role that might justify such a complete surface expression of Fc gamma-RII by bone marrow progenitors remains to be identified.
...
PMID:Murine KIT+ lineage- bone marrow progenitors express Fc gamma-RII but do not express Fc epsilon-RI until mast cell granule formation. 752 15
Mast cell growth factor (MGF), a molecule that serves as a ligand for the receptor tyrosine kinase
c-kit
, is important in
mast cell
differentiation, migration, and activation. Previous studies of paraffin-embedded human skin using antibody to murine MGF and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction have demonstrated MGF protein and mRNA expression in keratinocytes and isolated dermal cells. We utilized a monoclonal antibody to human MGF to further define patterns of immunoreactivity in frozen specimens of neonatal and adult skin from normal individuals and from patients with urticaria pigmentosa. In addition to keratinocytes and isolated dermal cells in normal and urticaria pigmentosa skin, MGF was detected in cells lining superficial and mid-dermal vessels. Co-expression of MGF and the vascular antigen CD31, and immunoelectron microscopy, identified MGF-positive cells as endothelial cells. Patterns of endothelial MGF expression were not influenced by
mast cell
degranulation and endothelial E-selectin induction in vitro. By ultrastructure, unfixed specimens demonstrated MGF expression both within the endothelial cytoplasm and in association with lumenal, but not ablumenal, surfaces. Specimens fixed with Nakane's solution had diminished endothelial cytoplasmic MGF reactivity, but lumenal expression was maintained, suggesting persistence of a membrane-associated reactivity. MGF mRNA was also detected in cultured dermal microvascular endothelial cells using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. These data establish human dermal endothelial cells as sites of MGF production and expression in human skin. Mast cell precursors must home to skin via vascular channels and differentiate in the immediate perivascular space. Thus, endothelial MGF may be an important determinant of adhesion and differentiation of
mast cell
progenitors expressing receptors for MGF.
...
PMID:Human dermal endothelial cells express membrane-associated mast cell growth factor. 752 42
The
c-kit
protooncogene encodes a receptor tyrosine kinase that mediates signals required for differentiation, proliferation and survival of mast cells. We have already shown the constitutive activation of
c-kit
receptor tyrosine kinase (KIT) in a human mast cell leukemia line (HMC-1) and a murine mastocytoma cell line (P-815). We here examined whether such constitutive activation of KIT occurred in the rat tumor
mast cell
line RBL-2H3 as well, which is frequently used as a tool for studying functions of mast cells. In RBL-2H3 cells, KIT was constitutively phosphorylated on tyrosine and activated in the absence of autocrine production of its ligand, stem cell factor (SCF). Sequencing analysis revealed that one of
c-kit
genes of RBL-2H3 cells had a point mutation, resulting in amino acid substitution of Tyr for Asp in codon 817. When rat wild-type
c-kit
cDNA and mutant-type
c-kit
cDNA encoding KITTyr817 were transfected into cells of a human embryonic kidney cell line (293T), only mutant form KITTyr817 was constitutively phosphorylated on tyrosine and activated in the absence of SCF. Since mutations at the same Asp codon constitutively activated KIT in all the human HMC-1, murine P-815, and rat RBL-2H3 cell lines, and since the incorporation of antisense oligonucleotides of
c-kit
messenger RNA significantly suppressed the proliferation of RBL-2H3 cells, the activating mutations in the Asp codon of the
c-kit
gene appeared to be involved in neoplastic growth of mast cells.
...
PMID:Substitution of an aspartic acid results in constitutive activation of c-kit receptor tyrosine kinase in a rat tumor mast cell line RBL-2H3. 753 1
Mechanisms affecting
mast cell
and melanocyte growth and function are still poorly understood. This report summarizes the current state of knowledge on a recently described growth factor for both these cell types and for primitive haematopoietic stem cells. Stem cell factor (SCF), also named mast cell growth factor or kit-ligand, has only recently been cloned and has been shown to be encoded on human chromosome 12. It may be of specific importance in cutaneous physiology and pathology since it is produced by several cell types in the skin (e.g. fibroblasts, keratinocytes, endothelial cells) and since it affects melanocyte and
mast cell
growth, survival, secretion and adhesion as well as migration into tissues. Defects in the genes encoding for the SCF receptor (
c-kit
-protein) have been shown to be responsible for human piebaldism. A pathogenetic role in mastocytosis has recently been proposed, but remains to be proven. SCF receptor expression is decreased on cells of some malignant cell lines compared to their physiological counterparts, making it unlikely that SCF is a key factor in malignant transformation and cellular hyperproliferation. In haematopoiesis, SCF acts primarily in concert with other growth factors, and we show here that alone in serum-free culture it has no effect on
mast cell
growth. Furthermore, there is evidence that besides SCF, additional
mast cell
growth factors are secreted by fibroblasts and keratinocytes, suggesting a complex orchestration of several growth factors in the regulation of cutaneous growth and differentiation in which SCF plays only one part.
...
PMID:Stem cell factor, a novel cutaneous growth factor for mast cells and melanocytes. 753 33
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