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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The recently identified ligand for c-kit, a protooncogene encoded by the W locus in mice, is a member of the
tyrosine kinase receptor
family with growth factor activity for mouse mast cells. Mature human mast cells regularly develop from agranular precursors in cord blood in long-term cocultures of cord blood and murine fibroblasts. Since the c-kit ligand is a product of murine fibroblasts, we examined the growth effect of recombinant human c-kit ligand (stem cell factor), of recombinant murine c-kit ligand (mast cell growth factor), and of a partially purified fraction derived from mouse fibroblast culture supernatant on the
mast cell
lineage of humans by electron microscopy in 8-week cultures of cord blood cells. We found that immature mast cells which developed in cultures containing the recombinant ligand for c-kit of human or murine origin as well as the naturally occurring c-kit ligand in 3T3 fibroblast supernatants were identical. Thus, each of these sources of the c-kit ligand exerted identical effects on the ontogeny of human mast cells as they develop from their agranular precursors in cord blood. Full maturity of factor-supported mast cells did not occur.
...
PMID:Human and murine recombinant c-kit ligands support the development of human mast cells from umbilical cord blood cells: ultrastructural identification. 768 96
The murine white (W) spotting locus is the site of the c-kit gene and encodes a
tyrosine kinase receptor
while the complementary Steel (Sl) locus encodes its ligand. Mutations at either locus have profound effects on hematopoiesis, particularly erythroid and
mast cell
proliferation. We added c-kit antisense oligonucleotides to long-term suspension cultures of enriched human umbilical cord progenitor cells. This resulted in the suppression of c-kit gene expression and the preferential suppression of the generation of erythroid burst-forming cells (BFU-E) which extended over the life of the culture (3 weeks). The results provide an in vitro model of the "W phenotype" in human hematopoiesis and confirm the importance of c-kit gene function in early erythropoiesis. Because the generation of BFU-E was suppressed even after c-kit gene expression had recovered, this gene product may be critical to the erythroid commitment process.
...
PMID:Induction of the murine "W phenotype" in long-term cultures of human cord blood cells by c-kit antisense oligomers. 769 34
We have examined the effect of human ligand for the flt3/flk2
tyrosine kinase receptor
on the differentiation of human mast cells in suspension cultures. We also explored the effect of flt3 ligand (FL) on the human
mast cell
line HMC-1 and mRNA expression of flt3/flk2 on in vitro developed human mast cells and HMC-1. The growth of cord blood mononuclear cells in suspension cultures was increased when cells were cultured in the presence of FL compared with cells cultured in the presence of stem cell factor (SCF). When SCF and FL were combined, the total cell growth was increased further. Our data show that Fl by itself neither induced differentiation of mast cells nor acted in the SCF-dependent differentiation of human cord blood-derived mast cells (CBMC). Furthermore, no effects of FL were found on the proliferation of HMC-1 cells or the induction of early-immediate response genes in HMC-1 cells. In addition, neither HMC-1 cells nor CBMC expressed mRNA for flt3. As has been shown before, SCF and FL have little biological effect on their own but synergize well with a number of other hematopoietic growth factors. This study shows that a major difference between FL and SCF is that only SCF affects the differentiation and activation of mast cells.
...
PMID:Stem cell factor, but not flt3 ligand, induces differentiation and activation of human mast cells. 863 31
Stem cell factor (SCF), also known as mast cell growth factor, kit ligand, and steel factor, is the ligand for the
tyrosine kinase receptor
(SCFR) that is encoded by the c-kit proto-oncogene. We analyzed the effects of recombinant human SCF (r-hSCF, 5-50 micrograms/kg/day, injected subcutaneously) on mast cells and melanocytes in a phase I study of 10 patients with advanced breast carcinoma. A wheal and flare reaction developed at each r-hSCF injection site; by electron microscopy, most dermal mast cells at these sites exhibited extensive, anaphylactic-type degranulation. A 14-d course of r-hSCF significantly increased dermal
mast cell
density at sites distant to those injected with the cytokine and also increased both urinary levels of the major histamine metabolite, methyl-histamine, and serum levels of
mast cell
alpha-tryptase. Five subjects developed areas of persistent hyperpigmentation at r-hSCF injection sites; by light microscopy, these sites exhibited markedly increased epidermal melanization and increased numbers of melanocytes. The demonstration that r-hSCF can promote both the hyperplasia and the functional activation of human mast cells and melanocytes in vivo has implications for our understanding of the role of endogenous SCF in health and disease. These findings also indicate that the interaction between SCF and its receptor represents a potential therapeutic target for regulating the numbers and functional activity of both mast cells and cutaneous melanocytes.
...
PMID:Recombinant human stem cell factor (kit ligand) promotes human mast cell and melanocyte hyperplasia and functional activation in vivo. 867 90
Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) may be accompanied by systemic mastocytosis. The mechanisms which play a role in the evolution of mastocytosis, however, are not well understood. We report on a case of refractory and anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS), and co-existing bone marrow mastocytosis. Compact
mast cell
(MC) infiltrates were detected in bone marrow sections by immunohistochemistry using an antibody to tryptase. In addition, the MC were found to express c-kit, the
tyrosine kinase receptor
for MGF (mast cell growth factor = stem cell factor, SCF). Activating point mutations in the kinase domain of c-kit (often found in mastocytosis) were not detectable. However, the mononuclear cells (MNC) of the bone marrow expressed mRNA specific for MITF, a transcription factor that regulates expression of c-kit and differentiation of MC. Surprisingly, the c-kit ligand SCF was found to augment expression of MITF mRNA in bone marrow MNC. Whether this augmentation represents a general response (preventing loss of growth factor receptor expression during cell maturation) common to all types of hemopoietic progenitors, or is confined to (some forms of) mastocytosis, remains unknown.
...
PMID:Detection of mi transcription factor (MITF) mRNA in a case of myelodysplastic syndrome and bone marrow mastocytosis. 955 2
Mastocytosis represents a
mast cell
proliferative disease that generally runs a benign clinical course, with spontaneous remissions mostly by puberty in childhood-onset disease, although rare forms, particularly in adult-onset disease, can be associated with (pre)malignant hematologic disorders and very rarely present as mast cell leukemia or malignant mastocytosis. Reasons for this divergent clinical behavior of childhood- versus adult-onset disease are unknown. Recently, two activating mutations in the intracellular domain of the proto-oncogene c-kit, which encodes a
tyrosine kinase receptor
for the mast cell growth factor stem cell factor, have been detected in the human leukemic
mast cell
line HMC-1. We have therefore studied lesional skin biopsies from patients with adult- and childhood-onset indolent mastocytosis for the presence of these codon 560 and 816 mutations. C-kit coding DNA sequences were amplified and analyzed by mutation-specific restriction analyses, and mutated polymerase chain reaction products were additionally cloned and sequenced. The codon 816 mutation was found in all six samples from adult patients, but not in any of the 11 specimens from children. In addition, the codon 560 mutation could be demonstrated for the first time in indolent mastocytosis, namely in two of four specimens from adult patients, but not in those from two children. These data thus provide a possible explanation for the divergent clinical behavior of adult- versus childhood-onset indolent mastocytosis, with the first being associated with an activating mutation, possibly as part of a neoplastic process, and the latter representing most likely a reactive process of an as yet unknown pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Identification of activating c-kit mutations in adult-, but not in childhood-onset indolent mastocytosis: a possible explanation for divergent clinical behavior. 985 47
Systemic mast cell disease is characterized by an abnormal infiltration of mast cells involving several parenchymal organs and the bone marrow. Its spectrum of clinical and histologic presentation is highly variable and is not necessarily correlated with prognosis. Mast cell disorders presenting as atypical infiltrates in the bone marrow may simulate or be associated with other hematolymphoid malignancies, from which they must be distinguished. The paucity of reliable histochemical and immunohistochemical markers for the detection of mast cells in paraffin sections further confounds this diagnosis. The authors have employed immunohistochemistry for the C-KIT encoded
tyrosine kinase receptor
protein, CD117, for detection of mast cells on paraffin sections of 89 bone marrow specimens including systemic
mast cell
disease and other disorders. CD117 staining was found in all cases of
mast cell
disorders (seven of seven), and in one case of chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast crisis. None of the other myeloid disorders tested (0 of 16), or any of the cases of Hodgkin's disease (0 of 12), B-cell lymphomas (0 of 32), T-cell lymphomas (0 of 3), or histiocytic proliferations (0 of 3) showed staining for CD117. CD117 expression is effective in the separation of
mast cell
disease from disorders that may simulate it histologically.
...
PMID:Utility of paraffin section immunohistochemistry for C-KIT (CD117) in the differential diagnosis of systemic mast cell disease involving the bone marrow. 1063 91
Ligation of the high-affinity IgE receptor (FcepsilonRI) or of c-Kit stimulates cytokine production in mast cells. We show that MEK kinase 2 (MEKK2), a MAPK kinase kinase (MAP3K) that regulates the JNK and ERK5 pathways, is required for cytokine production in embryonic stem (ES) cell-derived mast cells (ESMC). Targeted disruption of the MEKK2 or MEKK1 gene was used to abolish expression of the respective kinases in ESMC. Transcription of specific cytokines in response to IgE or c-Kit ligand was markedly reduced in MEKK2(-/-) ESMC relative to wild-type ESMC. Cytokine production in MEKK1(-/-) ESMC was similar to that of wild-type ESMC, demonstrating the specificity of MEKK2 in signaling cytokine gene regulation. MEKK2(-/-) ESMC also lost receptor-mediated stimulation of JNK. In contrast, JNK activation in response to UV irradiation was normal, showing that MEKK2 is required for receptor signaling but not for cellular stress responses. MEKK2 is the first MAP3K shown to be required for
mast cell
tyrosine kinase receptor
signaling controlling cytokine gene expression.
...
PMID:MEKK2 gene disruption causes loss of cytokine production in response to IgE and c-Kit ligand stimulation of ES cell-derived mast cells. 1103 6
The stem cell factor/c-kit
tyrosine kinase receptor
pathway has been shown to be important for tumor growth and progression in several cancers, including
mast cell
diseases, gastrointestinal stromal tumor, acute myeloid leukemia, small cell lung carcinoma, and Ewing sarcoma. Studies using the oral agent STI-571 (Gleevec, Novartis), an inhibitor of the tyrosine kinases bcr-abl, c-kit, and PDGFR, have shown significant responses in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia and gastrointestinal stromal tumor. With the aim of identifying additional groups of tumors that may use the stem cell factor/c-kit pathway and secondarily may be responsive to STI-571 treatment, this study surveyed 151 primary tumors from patients treated at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital for immunohistochemical expression of c-kit. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections were stained with rabbit polyclonal anti-human c-kit (CD117, Dako) using standard avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex technique, antigen retrieval, and an automated stainer. Strong, diffuse staining for c-kit was seen in a proportion of synovial sarcomas, osteosarcomas, and Ewing sarcomas. Strong, diffuse staining was less common in neuroblastomas, Wilms' tumors, and rhabdomyosarcomas and was negative in alveolar soft part sarcomas and desmoplastic small round cell tumors. Tumors with strong, diffuse staining for c-kit in a pattern similar to gastrointestinal stromal tumor may represent suitable targets for new therapeutic agents.
...
PMID:C-kit expression in pediatric solid tumors: a comparative immunohistochemical study. 1191 27
Mastocytosis comprises a heterogeneous group of hematological disorders which are morphologically defined by proliferation and accumulation of tissue mast cells in one or more organs. Clinical manifestations of mastocytosis range from disseminated maculopapular skin lesions (= urticaria pigmentosa [UP]) that may spontaneously regress to highly aggressive neoplasms like mast cell leukemia or
mast cell
sarcoma. Recently, it could be shown that systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a clonal disorder often exhibiting mutations of c-kit, a protooncogene encoding the
tyrosine kinase receptor
for stem cell factor (SCF). Mutations of c-kit are considered to play a key role in the pathogenesis of mastocytosis. Therefore, we investigated the unique case of a 36 year-old male patient with indolent systemic mastocytosis (ISM) evolving from UP (cutaneous mastocytosis) by means of histology, immunophenotyping and molecular biology. At the time of initial diagnosis the bone marrow showed only a mild diffuse increase in mast cells but compact infiltrates were missing. The serum tryptase levels were normal. Five years later, however, the bone marrow histology displayed patchycompact
mast cell
infiltrates, which now allowed to establish the diagnosis of an ISM. The serum tryptase levels at this time were markedly elevated. At both time points, mast cells were analyzed by immunohistochemistry using anti-tryptase antibody AA1, by flow cytometry using antibodies against CD2 and CD25, and nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on laser-microdissected, single pooled mast cells. Immunohistochemistry revealed strong tryptase-positivity of mast cells in both cutaneous and bone marrow infiltrates. Flow cytometry yielded an aberrant expression of CD2 and CD25 on bone marrow mast cells. However, repeated thorough PCR analysis failed to unveil c-kit mutation in atypical mast cells of skin and bone marrow samples of both dates. These findings clearly show that ISM can evolve from UP. Moreover, our study provides further evidence that the c-kit mutation Asp-816-Val is not invariably present in ISM.
...
PMID:Evolution of urticaria pigmentosa into indolent systemic mastocytosis: abnormal immunophenotype of mast cells without evidence of c-kit mutation ASP-816-VAL. 1268 51
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