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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Aggregation of the high affinity receptor for IgE (Fc epsilon RI) on the surface of mast cells results in the rapid hydrolysis of membrane inositol phospholipids by phospholipase C (PLC). Although at least seven isoenzymes of PLC have been characterized in different mammalian cells, the isoenzyme involved in Fc epsilon RI-mediated signal transduction and the mechanism of its activation have not been demonstrated. We now report that PLC-gamma 1 is translocated to the membrane of mast cells after aggregation of Fc epsilon RI. Activation of rat basophilic leukemia cells, a rat
mast cell
line, with oligomeric IgE resulted in an increase in PLC activity in washed membrane preparations in a cell free assay containing exogenous [3H]phosphatidylinositol (PI). The increase in PLC activity has the same dose-response to oligomeric IgE as receptor mediated hydrolysis of inositol lipids (PI hydrolysis) in intact cells. Analysis by Western blot probed with anti-PLC-gamma 1 antibody revealed that there is a three- to fourfold increase in PLC-gamma 1 in membranes from activated cells. The increase in PLC activity is augmented a further 20% by the addition of orthovanadate to the incubation medium suggesting that a tyrosine phosphatase is involved in the down-regulation of this phenomenon. These findings demonstrate translocation of PLC-gamma 1 to the membrane following activation of a receptor which does not contain intrinsic
tyrosine kinase
activity. Activation of PLC-gamma 1 by this pathway may account for Fc epsilon RI-mediated PI hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Phospholipase C-gamma 1 is translocated to the membrane of rat basophilic leukemia cells in response to aggregation of IgE receptors. 131 4
Mast cells accumulate at sites of neovascularization, solid tumors, and many immune reactions. Such accumulation requires directed migration of mature mast cells or their precursors. The nature of the chemoattractants that regulate
mast cell
motility and the identity of the receptors that mediate the chemotactic response are poorly understood. We have tested the ability of stem cell factor (SCF), a mast cell growth factor, to stimulate
mast cell
migration. Our results show that SCF is a potent
mast cell
attractant that stimulates directional motility of both mucosal and connective tissue-type mast cells. The activity is potentiated by costimulation with interleukin-3 (IL-3), another
mast cell
chemoattractant. SCF, a known ligand for the c-kit tyrosine kinase receptor, was unable to stimulate motility in W42 mutant mast cells, which have a defective c-kit
tyrosine kinase
. However, W42 mast cells were still able to migrate in response to IL-3. These results show that SCF is a chemotactic factor as well as a growth factor and that the c-kit receptor can transduce signals leading to both cell proliferation and increased directional cell motility.
...
PMID:The c-kit receptor ligand functions as a mast cell chemoattractant. 137 Oct 80
Natural killer cells express an Fc receptor for IgG (CD16) in association with disulfide-linked dimers composed of two homologous subunits: the zeta chain of the T cell antigen receptor complex and the gamma chain of the
mast cell
/basophil Fc receptor for IgE. The ability of zeta and gamma to transduce CD16-mediated activation signals was compared by reconstituting distinct CD16 receptor isoforms composed of various combinations of zeta- and gamma-containing dimers. Stably transformed non-hematopoietic and hematopoietic cell lines were established that expressed chimeric molecules comprising the extracellular domain of CD16 joined to the transmembrane and intracellular domains of zeta or gamma. Reconstituted CD16 receptor complexes triggered Ca2+ influx, tyrosine phosphorylation, and IL-2 production in stable transformants of the Jurkat T cell line. However, cross-linking of the CD16/gamma chimera induced a specific pattern of tyrosine phosphorylation and was more efficient at signal transduction than a CD16, zeta-zeta complex, suggesting that zeta and gamma cytoplasmic domains may be coupled to distinct
tyrosine kinase
pathways that differentially regulate CD16-mediated activation signals. By contrast, both CD16/zeta and CD16/gamma chimeric molecules were not functional in stable transformants of the fibroblast Chinese Hamster Ovary cell line, indicating a requirement for downstream signaling components present in hematopoietic cells. Finally, the zeta transmembrane domain appears to preferentially associate with CD16 rather than the CD3:TCR complex, suggesting that a hierarchy of molecular interactions governs NK and T cell differentiation.
...
PMID:Signaling function of reconstituted CD16: zeta: gamma receptor complex isoforms. 147 81
Mast cells are hypothesized to participate in processes leading to tissue fibrosis in human lung and skin. To explore the possible involvement of
mast cell
mediators in fibrogenesis, the mitogenic activity of mast cell tryptase from human lung was examined in vitro. The results indicate that human tryptase is a potent inducer of DNA synthesis in fibroblasts from multiple sources, including human lung. As demonstrated by mitogenic responses in fibroblasts, but not in vascular smooth muscle cells, tryptase is a mitogen with target cell specificity. Additionally, specificity is demonstrated by the differences in mitogenic activity of tryptase in comparison with thrombin, a structurally related mitogenic proteinase. Examination of the mitogenic effects of tryptase in the presence of other mitogens reveals synergy with mitogens that act through receptors coupled to intrinsic tyrosine kinases (insulin, epidermal growth factor, and basic fibroblast growth factor) or to G proteins (thrombin and serotonin). In the latter case, studies in Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts using specific receptor agonists and antagonists or receptor-transfected cell lines reveal a requirement for the activation of a G protein (Gi) negatively coupled to adenylate cyclase to act synergistically with tryptase. These data establish that human tryptase is a potent and specific mitogen in vitro and suggest that mitogenic signals generated by tryptase can interact synergistically with signals generated by both
tyrosine kinase
-coupled and G protein-coupled growth factor receptors.
...
PMID:Human tryptase as a potent, cell-specific mitogen: role of signaling pathways in synergistic responses. 159 Apr 4
The mature cells in the haemopoietic system arise as the result of the extensive developmental and proliferative capacity of pluripotential stem cells. In order to understand the molecular basis for these developmental processes, it will be necessary to identify and characterize the cellular genes that control early steps in haemopoiesis. Mutations at the mouse W locus on chromosome 5 lead to pleiotropic developmental defects, including sterility, coat colour abnormalities, severe macrocytic anaemia and
mast cell
deficiency. The defects in all these lineages are cell autonomous and intrinsic, suggesting that the W locus encodes a gene product required directly for cellular differentiation. In an attempt to understand this classical mouse developmental mutation, we have demonstrated that the c-kit proto-oncogene, which encodes a transmembrane receptor
tyrosine kinase
, is very closely linked to W. Several further observations are consistent with the idea that W and c-kit are allelic: first, c-kit is expressed in those cell populations affected by W mutations; second, the expression of c-kit transcripts can be affected by mutations at the W locus; third, the
tyrosine kinase
activity associated with the protein encoded by c-kit is functionally impaired in mast cells derived from mutant W/Wv mice; and fourth, rearrangements within the c-kit gene have been reported in two W mutant alleles. These observations suggest that the dominant phenotype associated with W mutations results from loss-of-function alterations that affect the receptor tyrosine kinase encoded by c-kit. The demonstration that the W locus encodes a transmembrane growth factor receptor provides a molecular basis for understanding the intrinsic haemopoietic defect in W mutant mice and the role that this cellular proto-oncogene plays in haemopoiesis and other developmental processes.
...
PMID:The mouse W/c-kit locus. 169 Jun 23
Mutations at the mouse W/c-kit locus lead to intrinsic defects in stem cells of the melanocytic, hematopoietic, and germ cell lineages. W alleles vary in the overall severity of phenotype that they confer, and some alleles exhibit an independence of pleiotropic effects. To elucidate the molecular basis for these biological differences, we analyzed the c-kit locus and the c-kit-associated autophosphorylation activities in five different W mutants representative of a range of W phenotypes. Mast cell cultures derived from mice or embryos homozygous for each W allele were deficient in c-kit autophosphorylation activity, the extent of which paralleled the severity of phenotype conferred by a given W allele both in vivo and in an in vitro
mast cell
coculture assay. The mildly dominant, homozygous viable alleles W44 and W57 were found to express reduced levels of an apparently normal c-kit protein. In contrast, c-kit kinase defects conferred by the moderately dominant, homozygous viable alleles W41 or W55 or the homozygous lethal allele, W37, were attributed to single-point mutations within the kinase domain of the c-kit polypeptide, which result in point substitutions of amino acid residues highly conserved in the family of protein tyrosine kinases. The nature and location of these amino acid substitutions account for the relative severity of phenotypes conferred by these W alleles and demonstrate that the pleiotropic developmental defects associated with the W/c-kit locus arise as the result of dominant loss-of-function mutations in a transmembrane receptor
tyrosine kinase
.
...
PMID:W mutant mice with mild or severe developmental defects contain distinct point mutations in the kinase domain of the c-kit receptor. 169 59
The proto-oncogene c-kit encodes a transmembrane tyrosine protein kinase receptor for an unknown ligand and is allelic with the murine white-spotting locus (W). Mutations at the W locus affect various aspects of hematopoiesis, the proliferation and migration of primordial germ cells and melanoblasts during development. The original W mutation and W37 are severe lethal mutations when homozygous. In the heterozygous state the W mutation has a weak phenotype while W37 has dominant characteristics. Wv and W41 are weak W mutations with dominant characteristics. We have characterized the molecular basis of these four W mutations and determined their effects on
mast cell
differentiation by using a fibroblast/
mast cell
co-culture assay. We show that W37, Wv and W41 are the result of missense mutations in the kinase domain of the c-kit coding sequence (W37 E----K at position 582; Wv T----M position 660 and W41 V----M position 831), which affect the c-kit associated
tyrosine kinase
to varying degrees. The c-kit protein products in homozygous mutant mast cells are expressed normally, although the 160 kd cell membrane form of the c-kitW37 protein displays accelerated turnover characteristics. The W mutation is the result of a 78 amino acid deletion which includes the transmembrane domain of the c-kit protein. A 125 kd c-kit protein was detected in homozygous W/W mast cells which lacks kinase activity and is not expressed on the cell surface.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Molecular bases of dominant negative and loss of function mutations at the murine c-kit/white spotting locus: W37, Wv, W41 and W. 169 31
The W/c-kit and Steel loci respectively encode a receptor tyrosine kinase (Kit) and its extracellular ligand, Steel factor, which are essential for the development of hematopoietic, melanocyte, and germ cell lineages in the mouse. To determine the biochemical basis of the Steel/W developmental pathway, we have investigated the response of the Kit
tyrosine kinase
and several potential cytoplasmic targets to stimulation with Steel in mast cells derived from normal and mutant W mice. In normal mast cells, Steel induces Kit to autophosphorylate on tyrosine and bind to phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (PI3K) and phospholipase C-gamma 1 but not detectably to Ras GTPase-activating protein. Additionally, we present evidence that Kit tyrosine phosphorylation acts as a switch to promote complex formation with PI3K. In mast cells from mice homozygous for the W42 mutant allele, Kit is not tyrosine phosphorylated and fails to bind PI3K following Steel stimulation. In contrast, in the transformed
mast cell
line P815, Kit is constitutively phosphorylated and binds to PI3K in the absence of ligand. These results suggest that Kit autophosphorylation and its physical association with a unique subset of cytoplasmic signaling proteins are critical for mammalian development.
...
PMID:The Steel/W transduction pathway: kit autophosphorylation and its association with a unique subset of cytoplasmic signaling proteins is induced by the Steel factor. 171 23
Mice with W mutations characterized by hypopigmentation, sterility, anemia, and
mast cell
deficiency have abnormalities in c-kit, a receptor with
tyrosine kinase
activity. Recently, the ligand for c-kit was cloned by investigators in several laboratories. Zsebo et al identified and cloned a gene for a cytokine termed stem cell factor (SCF) in the medium conditioned by buffalo rat liver cells, and this cytokine proved to be c-kit ligand. We have examined the effects of recombinant rat SCF (rrSCF) on colony formation from primitive hematopoietic progenitors in culture. rrSCF and erythropoietin (Ep) supported formation of granulocyte/macrophage (GM) colonies as well as a small number of multilineage and blast cell colonies from marrow cells of normal mice. We then examined the effects of rrSCF using marrow and spleen cells of mice that had been treated with 150 mg/kg 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Unlike single factors, combinations of factors such as rrSCF plus interleukin-3 (IL-3), rrSCF plus IL-6, and rrSCF plus granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) markedly stimulated the growth of multilineage colonies. In contrast to these factor combinations and a combination of IL-3 and IL-6, a combination of rrSCF and IL-4 did not support multilineage colony formation. Mapping studies of the development of multipotential blast cell colonies further indicated that rrSCF, like IL-6, G-CSF, and IL-11, shortens the dormant period in which the stem cells reside. When we tested the effects of rrSCF using pooled blast cells, which are highly enriched for progenitors and are devoid of stromal cells, rrSCF plus Ep supported formation of only a few multilineage colonies, indicating that rrSCF itself is ineffective in support of the proliferation of multipotential progenitors. However, rrSCF supported formation of a significant number of neutrophil and neutrophil/macrophage colonies from pooled blast cells, indicating that rrSCF is able to support directly the proliferation of progenitors in neutrophil/monocyte lineages. c-kit ligand may play important roles in adult hematopoiesis.
...
PMID:Enhancement of murine blast cell colony formation in culture by recombinant rat stem cell factor, ligand for c-kit. 171 19
IL-3 dependent
mast cell
lines produce cytokines in response to Fc receptor cross-linkage or to ionomycin. In this study we have observed that cells pre-cultured in IL-3 produce 10-100 times more cytokine after receptor cross-linkage in comparison with IL-4 pre-cultured cells. Although several hematopoietin receptors, including those for IL-3, IL-4 and EPO, do not contain
tyrosine kinase
domains, their occupancy with ligand causes tyrosine phosphorylation of specific cellular substrates. Therefore, the contribution of
tyrosine kinase
activation to the ability of an IL-3 dependent
mast cell
line, CFTL-15, to produce cytokines was analyzed. The CFTL-15 cells were transfected with growth factor receptors containing ligand-inducible
tyrosine kinase
domains (EGFR and PDGFR, and CSF-IR) or with the EPOR. All of the transfectants were able to proliferate in response to IL-3 or to their respective growth factor and to produce IL-3 in response to IgE receptor cross-linkage. Stimulation of the EGFR and PDGFR transfectants with their respective ligands resulted in the production of IL-3, IL-6, and GM-CSF. Stimulation of the CSF-1R or EPOR transfectants with growth factor alone failed to induce cytokine production. However, in co-stimulation assays each of the growth factors enhanced the amount of cytokine produced in response to Fc epsilon RI cross-linkage. The ability of these stimuli to induce tyrosine phosphorylation in the transfectants was analyzed. Fc epsilon RI cross-linkage in the transfectants routinely induced the tyrosine phosphorylation of 145, 86 and 72 kDa proteins, with occasional phosphorylation of 55, 52, and 40 kDa proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ligand stimulation of transfected and endogenous growth factor receptors enhances cytokine production by mast cells. 171 40
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