首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 296 毫秒
1.
Tumor cells are surrounded by infiltrating inflammatory cells, such as lymphocytes, neutrophils, macrophages, and mast cells. A body of evidence indicates that mast cells are associated with various types of tumors. Although role of mast cells can be directly related to their granule content, their function in angiogenesis and tumor progression remains obscure. This study aims to understand the role of mast cells in these processes. Tumors were chemically induced in BALB/c mice and tumor progression was divided into Phases I, II and III. Phase I tumors exhibited a large number of mast cells, which increased in phase II and remained unchanged in phase III. The expression of mouse mast cell protease (mMCP)-4, mMCP-5, mMCP-6, mMCP-7, and carboxypeptidase A were analyzed at the 3 stages. Our results show that with the exception of mMCP-4 expression of these mast cell chymase (mMCP-5), tryptases (mMCP-6 and 7), and carboxypeptidase A (mMC-CPA) increased during tumor progression. Chymase and tryptase activity increased at all stages of tumor progression whereas the number of mast cells remained constant from phase II to III. The number of new blood vessels increased significantly in phase I, while in phases II and III an enlargement of existing blood vessels occurred. In vitro, mMCP-6 and 7 are able to induce vessel formation. The present study suggests that mast cells are involved in induction of angiogenesis in the early stages of tumor development and in modulating blood vessel growth in the later stages of tumor progression.  相似文献   

2.
Although the innate immune function of mast cells in the acute phase of parasitic and bacterial infections is well established, their participation in chronic immune responses to indolent infection remains incompletely understood. In parasitic infection with Trichinella spiralis, the immune response incorporates both lymphocyte and mast cell-dependent effector functions for pathogen eradication. Among the mechanistic insights still unresolved in the reaction to T. spiralis are the means by which mast cells respond to parasites and the mast cell effector functions that contribute to the immunologic response to this pathogen. We hypothesized that mast cell elaboration of tryptase may comprise an important effector component in this response. Indeed, we find that mice deficient in the tryptase mouse mast cell protease-6 (mMCP-6) display a significant difference in their response to T. spiralis larvae in chronically infected skeletal muscle tissue. Mechanistically, this is associated with a profound inability to recruit eosinophils to larvae in mMCP-6-deficient mice. Analysis of IgE-deficient mice demonstrates an identical defect in eosinophil recruitment. These findings establish that mast cell secretion of the tryptase mMCP-6, a function directed by the activity of the adaptive immune system, contributes to eosinophil recruitment to the site of larval infection, thereby comprising an integral link in the chronic immune response to parasitic infection.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Dipeptidyl peptidase I (DPPI) is the sole activator in vivo of several granule-associated serine proteases of cytotoxic lymphocytes. In vitro, DPPI also activates mast cell chymases and tryptases. To determine whether DPPI is essential for their activation in vivo, we used enzyme histochemical and immunohistochemical approaches and solution-based activity assays to study these enzymes in tissues and bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) from DPPI +/+ and DPPI -/- mice. We find that DPPI -/- mast cells contain normal amounts of immunoreactive chymases but no chymase activity, indicating that DPPI is essential for chymase activation and suggesting that DPPI -/- mice are functional chymase knockouts. The absence of DPPI and chymase activity does not affect the growth, granularity, or staining characteristics of BMMCs and, despite prior predictions, does not alter IgE-mediated exocytosis of histamine. In contrast, the level of active tryptase (mMCP-6) in DPPI -/- BMMCs is 25% that of DPPI +/- BMMCs. These findings indicate that DPPI is not essential for mMCP-6 activation but does influence the total amount of active mMCP-6 in mast cells and therefore may be an important, but not exclusive mechanism for tryptase activation.  相似文献   

5.
Mouse mast cell protease (mMCP) 6 and mMCP-7 are homologous tryptases stored in granules as macromolecular complexes with heparin and/or chondroitin sulfate E containing serglycin proteoglycans. When pro-mMCP-7 and pseudozymogen forms of this tryptase and mMCP-6 were separately expressed in insect cells, all three recombinant proteins were secreted into the conditioned medium as properly folded, enzymatically inactive 33-kDa monomers. However, when their propeptides were removed, mMCP-6 and mMCP-7 became enzymatically active and spontaneously assumed an approximately 150-kDa tetramer structure. Heparin was not required for this structural change. When incubated at 37 degrees C, recombinant mMCP-7 progressively lost its enzymatic activity in a time-dependent manner. Its N-linked glycans helped regulate the thermal stability of mMCP-7. However, the ability of this tryptase to form the enzymatically active tetramer was more dependent on a highly conserved Trp-rich domain on its surface. Although recombinant mMCP-6 and mMCP-7 preferred to form homotypic tetramers, these tryptases readily formed heterotypic tetramers in vitro. This latter finding indicates that the tetramer structural unit is a novel way the mast cell uses to assemble varied combinations of tryptases.  相似文献   

6.
Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) is widely distributed throughout the heart, skin, gastrointestinal and genital tracts, and nervous and immune systems. ANP acts to mediate vasodilation and induces mast cell activation in both human and rats in vitro. However, the mechanisms of ANP-induced mast cell activation, the extent to which ANP can induce tissue swelling, mast cell degranulation, and granulocyte infiltration in mouse skin are not fully understood. This issue was investigated by treatment with ANP in rat peritoneal mast cells (RPMCs) and mouse peritoneal mast cells (MPMCs) in vitro and by injection of ANP into the skin of congenic normal WBB6F1/J-Kit+/Kit+ +/+, genetically mast cell-deficient WBB6F1/J-Kit(W)/Kit(W-v) (W/W(v)) and mast cell-engrafted W/W(v) (BMCMC→W/W(v)) mice in vivo. ANP induced the release of histamine and TNF-α from RPMCs and enhanced serotonin release from MPMCs, in a dose-dependent fashion, as well as reduced cAMP level of RPMCs in vitro. In +/+ mice, ANP induced significant tissue swelling, mast cell degranulation, and granulocyte infiltration in a dose-dependent manner, whereas not in genetically mast cell-deficient W/W(v) mice. However, ANP-induced cutaneous inflammation has been restored in BMCMC→W/W(v) mice. These data indicate that mast cells play a key role in the ANP-induced cutaneous inflammation.  相似文献   

7.
The mouse and human TPSB2 and TPSAB1 genes encode tetramer-forming tryptases stored in the secretory granules of mast cells (MCs) ionically bound to heparin-containing serglycin proteoglycans. In mice these genes encode mouse MC protease-6 (mMCP-6) and mMCP-7. The corresponding human genes encode a family of serine proteases that collectively are called hTryptase-β. We previously showed that the α chain of fibrinogen is a preferred substrate of mMCP-7. We now show that this plasma protein also is highly susceptible to degradation by hTryptase-β· and mMCP-6·heparin complexes and that Lys(575) is a preferred cleavage site in the protein α chain. Because cutaneous mouse MCs store substantial amounts of mMCP-6·heparin complexes in their secretory granules, the passive cutaneous anaphylaxis reaction was induced in the skin of mMCP-6(+)/mMCP-7(-) and mMCP-6(-)/mMCP-7(-) C57BL/6 mice. In support of the in vitro data, fibrin deposits were markedly increased in the skin of the double-deficient mice 6 h after IgE-sensitized animals were given the relevant antigen. Fibrinogen is a major constituent of the edema fluid that accumulates in tissues when MCs degranulate. Our discovery that mouse and human tetramer-forming tryptases destroy fibrinogen before this circulating protein can be converted to fibrin changes the paradigm of how MCs hinder fibrin deposition and blood coagulation internally. Because of the adverse consequences of fibrin deposits in tissues, our data explain why mice and humans lack a circulating protease inhibitor that rapidly inactivates MC tryptases and why mammals have two genes that encode tetramer-forming serine proteases that preferentially degrade fibrinogen.  相似文献   

8.
Basophils have been erroneously considered as minor relatives of mast cells, due to some phenotypic similarity between them. While recent studies have revealed non-redundant roles for basophils in various immune responses, basophil-derived effector molecules, including lipid mediators, remain poorly characterized, compared to mast cell-derived ones. Here we analyzed and compared eicosanoids produced by mouse basophils and mast cells when stimulated with IgE plus allergens. The production of 5-LOX metabolites such as LTB4 and 5-HETE was detected as early as 0.5 h post-stimulation in both cell types, even though their amounts were much smaller in basophils than in mast cells. In contrast, basophils and mast cells showed distinct time course in the production of COX metabolites, including PGD2, PGE2 and 11-HETE. Their production by mast cells was detected at both 0.5 and 6 h post-stimulation while that by basophils was detectable only at 6 h. Of note, mast cells showed 8–9 times higher levels of COX-1 than did basophils at the resting status. In contrast to unaltered COX-1 expression with or without stimulation, COX-2 expression was up-regulated in both cell types upon activation. Importantly, when activated, basophils expressed 4–5 times higher levels of COX-2 than did mast cells. In accordance with these findings, the late-phase production of the COX metabolites by basophils was completely ablated by COX-2 inhibitor whereas the early-phase production by mast cells was blocked by COX-1 but not COX-2 inhibitor. Thus, the production of COX metabolites is differentially regulated by COX-1 and COX-2 in basophils and mast cells.  相似文献   

9.
Mast cell tryptase is stored as an active tetramer in complex with heparin in mast cell secretory granules. Previously, we demonstrated the dependence on heparin for the activation/tetramer formation of a recombinant tryptase. Here we have investigated the structural requirements for this activation process. The ability of heparin-related saccharides to activate a recombinant murine tryptase, mouse mast cell protease-6 (mMCP-6), was strongly dependent on anionic charge density and size. The dose-response curve for heparin-induced mMCP-6 activation displayed a bell-shaped appearance, indicating that heparin acts by binding to more than one tryptase monomer simultaneously. The minimal heparin oligosaccharide required for binding to mMCP-6 was 8-10 saccharide units. Gel filtration analyses showed that such short oligosaccharides were unable to generate tryptase tetramers, but instead gave rise to active mMCP-6 monomers. The active monomers were inhibited by bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, whereas the tetramers were resistant. Furthermore, monomeric (but not tetrameric) mMCP-6 degraded fibronectin. Our results suggest a model for tryptase tetramer formation that involves bridging of tryptase monomers by heparin or other highly sulfated polysaccharides of sufficient chain length. Moreover, our results raise the possibility that some of the reported activities of tryptase may be related to active tryptase monomers that may be formed according to the mechanism described here.  相似文献   

10.
Heparin-deficient mice, generated by gene targeting of N-deacetylase/N-sulfotransferase-2 (NDST-2), display severe mast cell defects, including an absence of stored mast cell proteases. However, the mechanism behind these observations is not clear. Here we show that NDST-2+/+ bone marrow-derived mast cells cultured in the presence of IL-3 synthesise, in addition to highly sulphated chondroitin sulphate (CS), small amounts of equally highly sulphated heparin-like polysaccharide. The corresponding NDST-2-/- cells produced highly sulphated CS only. Carboxypeptidase A (CPA) activity was detected in NDST+/+ cells but was almost absent in the NDST-/- cells, whereas tryptase (mouse mast cell protease 6; mMCP-6) activity and antigen was detected in both cell types. Antigen for the chymase mMCP-5 was detected in NDST-2+/+ cells but not in the heparin-deficient cells. Northern blot analysis revealed mRNA expression of CPA, mMCP-5 and mMCP-6 in both wild-type and NDST-2-/- cells. A approximately 36 kDa CPA band, corresponding to proteolytically processed active CPA, as well as a approximately 50 kDa pro-CPA band was present in NDST-2+/+ cells. The NDST-2-/- mast cells contained similar levels of pro-CPA as the wild-type mast cells, but the approximately 36 kDa band was totally absent. This indicates that the processing of pro-CPA to its active form may require the presence of heparin and provides the first insight into a mechanism by which the absence of heparin may cause disturbed secretory granule organisation in mast cells.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Evaluation of human peripheral blood leukocytes for mast cell tryptase   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Murine monoclonal and goat polyclonal antibodies against tryptase, the dominant neutral protease and protein component in secretory granules of human mast cells, were used to assess the presence of tryptase in peripheral leukocytes. Carnoy's fluid-fixed cytocentrifuge preparations of enriched populations of lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, and neutrophils showed no reactivity with anti-tryptase antibodies by a sensitive indirect immunoperoxidase procedure. Dispersed human lung mast cells showed strong granular cytoplasmic staining with both antibodies, whereas only approximately 50% of the peripheral blood basophils detectable with Wright's stain were detected with anti-tryptase antibodies, and these showed a staining pattern that was faint, granular, and cytoplasmic at high concentrations of antibody. At lower antibody concentrations mast cell staining was still intense, whereas basophils were not stained. Extracts of neutrophils and lymphocytes of up to 90% purity had undetectable amounts of tryptase by an ELISA sandwich immunoassay, as well as undetectable enzymatic activity with tosyl-L-gly-pro-lys-p-nitroanilide (a sensitive substrate for tryptase) in the presence of soybean trypsin inhibitor. Extracts of basophil-enriched (6 to 50% purity) preparations contained 0.046 +/- 0.013 pg of tryptase per basophil by the immunoassay along with 2 X 10(-9) +/- 0.8 X 10(-9) U of tryptase-like enzyme activity per basophil, compared with corresponding values of 12 pg, 480 X 10(-9) U of tryptase per human lung mast cell. Thus very small amounts of tryptase are present in human basophils (approximately 0.4% of that found in mast cells), but not in other peripheral leukocytes.  相似文献   

13.
Tryptase‐positive mast cells populate melanomas, but it is not known whether tryptase impacts on melanoma progression. Here we addressed this and show that melanoma growth is significantly higher in tryptase‐deficient (Mcpt6?/?) versus wild‐type mice. Histochemical analysis showed that mast cells were frequent in the tumor stroma of both wild‐type and Mcpt6?/? mice, and also revealed their presence within the tumor parenchyma. Confocal microscopy analysis revealed that tryptase was taken up by the tumor cells. Further, tryptase‐positive granules were released from mast cells and were widely distributed within the tumor tissue, suggesting that tryptase could impact on the tumor microenvironment. Indeed, gene expression analysis showed that the absence of Mcpt6 caused decreased expression of numerous genes, including Cxcl9, Tgtp2, and Gbp10, while the expression of 5p‐miR3098 was enhanced. The levels of CXCL9 were lower in serum from Mcpt6?/? versus wild‐type mice. In further support of a functional impact of tryptase on melanoma, recombinant tryptase (Mcpt6) was taken up by cultured melanoma cells and caused reduced proliferation. Altogether, our results indicate a protective role of mast cell tryptase in melanoma growth.  相似文献   

14.
Tryptase, a serine protease with trypsin-like substrate cleavage properties, is one of the key effector molecules during allergic inflammation. It is stored in large quantities in the mast cell secretory granules in complex with heparin proteoglycan, and these complexes are released during mast cell degranulation. In the present paper, we have studied the mechanism for tryptase activation. Recombinant mouse tryptase, mouse mast cell protease 6 (mMCP-6), was produced in a mammalian expression system. The mMCP-6 fusion protein contained an N-terminal 6 x His tag followed by an enterokinase (EK) site replacing the native activation peptide (6xHis-EK-mMCP-6). In the absence of heparin, barely detectable enzyme activity was obtained after enterokinase cleavage of 6xHis-EK-mMCP-6 over a pH range of 5.5-7.5. However, when heparin was present, 6xHis-EK-mMCP-6 yielded active enzyme when enterokinase cleavage was performed at pH 5.5-6.0 but not at neutral pH. Affinity chromatography analysis showed that mMCP-6 bound strongly to heparin-Sepharose at pH 6.0 but not at neutral pH. After enterokinase cleavage of the sample at pH 6.0, mMCP-6 occurred in inactive monomeric form as shown by FPLC analysis on a Superdex 200 column. When heparin was added at pH 6.0, enzymatically active higher molecular weight complexes were formed, e.g., a dominant approximately 200 kDa complex that may correspond to tryptase tetramers. No formation of active tetramers was observed at neutral pH. When injected intraperitoneally, mMCP-6 together with heparin caused neutrophil influx, but no signs of inflammation were seen in the absence of heparin. The present paper thus indicates a crucial role for heparin in the formation of active mast cell tryptase.  相似文献   

15.
Mouse mast cell protease-4 (mMCP-4) has been linked to autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, although the exact mechanisms underlying its role in these pathological conditions remain unclear. Here, we have found that mMCP-4 is critical in a mouse model of the autoimmune skin blistering disease bullous pemphigoid (BP). Mice lacking mMCP-4 were resistant to experimental BP. Complement activation, mast cell (MC) degranulation, and the early phase of neutrophil (PMN) recruitment occurred comparably in mMCP-4(-/-) and WT mice. However, without mMCP-4, activation of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 was impaired in cultured mMCP-4(-/-) MCs and in the skin of pathogenic IgG-injected mMCP-4(-/-) mice. MMP-9 activation was not fully restored by local reconstitution with WT or mMCP-4(-/-) PMNs. Local reconstitution with mMCP-4(+/+) MCs, but not with mMCP-4(-/-) MCs, restored blistering, MMP-9 activation, and PMN recruitment in mMCP-4(-/-) mice. mMCP-4 also degraded the hemidesmosomal transmembrane protein BP180 both in the skin and in vitro. These results demonstrate that mMCP-4 plays two different roles in the pathogenesis of experimental BP, by both activating MMP-9 and by cleaving BP180, leading to injury of the hemidesmosomes and extracellular matrix of the basement membrane zone.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Human eosinophils contain several distinctive proteins including eosinophil granule MBP and the membrane-associated CLC protein (lysophospholipase). Human basophils also contain these proteins, indicating biochemical similarities between eosinophils and basophils. To determine whether MBP or CLC protein is present in connective tissue mast cells, we studied human lung and cutaneous mast cells by immunofluorescence by utilizing specific antibodies to CLC and MBP. Cytocentrifuge slides of enriched lung mast cells and mast cells in sections of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded cutaneous tissue from urticaria pigmentosa lesions were stained for CLC and MBP. Neither pulmonary nor cutaneous mast cells stained for CLC protein or MBP. In contrast, lung and cutaneous eosinophils in the same preparations showed bright staining for both proteins. The failure to find CLC protein and MBP in mast cells provides additional evidence of dissimilarity between mast cells and basophils, and an immunochemical means to distinguish between them.  相似文献   

18.
Enzyme histochemistry of rat mast cell tryptase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fixation and staining conditions for rat mast cell tryptase and its histochemical distribution in different rat tissues were investigated. Prostate, skin, lung, gut, stomach and salivary glands were fixed in either aldehyde or Carnoy fixatives and then frozen or embedded in paraffin wax. Preservation of tryptase enzymic activity against peptide substrates required aldehyde fixation and frozen sectioning. Of the peptide substrates examined, z-Ala-Ala-Lys-4-methoxy-2-naphthylamide and z-Gly-Pro-Arg-4-methoxy-2-naphthylamide proved the most effective for the demonstration of tryptase. Double staining by enzyme cytochemistry followed by immunological detection of tryptase showed that, in all tryptase-containing mast cells, the enzyme is at least in part active. Conventional dye-binding histochemistry was used to confirm the identity of mast cells. Aldehyde-fixed mucosal mast cells required a much shorter staining time with Toluidine Blue if tissue sections were washed directly in t-butyl alcohol. Double staining by enzyme cytochemistry and dye binding showed that tryptase is absent from mucosal and subepidermal mast cells, which are also smaller in size and appear to contain fewer granules than connective tissue mast cells. This study demonstrates that rat mast cell tryptase, unlike tryptases in other species, is a soluble enzyme. It is stored in an active form and is absent from some mast cell subpopulations in mucosa, skin and lung. © 1998 Chapman & Hall  相似文献   

19.
Activation of cutaneous sensory nerves induces vasodilatation and vascular permeability, i.e., neurogenic inflammation. We examined the histology and possible mast cell involvement in cutaneous neurogenic inflammation induced by electrical nerve stimulation (ENS). Three lines of evidence indicated that mast cells were not involved in rodent cutaneous neurogenic inflammation induced by electrical stimulation of the saphenous nerve. 1) Most mast cells (86.5% of all mast cells in the dorsal skin of the paw) were found in the deep dermis, whereas vessels developing increased vascular permeability after nerve stimulation (visualized with the supravital dye Monastral blue B, a macro-molecular tracer) were localized predominantly in the superficial dermis. By contrast, i.v. substance P, which also causes increased cutaneous vascular permeability, predominantly caused deeper vessels to leak. As analyzed by electron microscopy, the vessels that developed permeability in response to nerve stimulation, and were thereby stained with Monastral blue B, were found to be exclusively postcapillary venules. 2) Disodium cromoglycate (DSCG), a mast cell stabilizing compound, inhibited the cutaneous vascular permeability induced by intradermal injections of anti-IgE in a dose-dependent manner. By contrast, vascular permeability induced by ENS was not influenced by disodium cromoglycate treatment. 3) ENS and i.v. substance P both induced cutaneous vascular permeability in mast cell-deficient W/Wv mice, despite the fact that their skin contained only 4.7% of the mast cells present in their normal +/+ litter mates. The magnitude of ENS-induced vascular permeability responses in W/Wv mice were similar to control +/+ and BALB/c mice. This study supports our earlier observations suggesting that mast cell activation is not essential for the initial, vascular permeability phase of neurogenic inflammation in rodent skin.  相似文献   

20.
Mucosal mast cells (MMC) play an important role in the immune response against selected species of intestinal nematode. The kinetics with which different strains of inbred mice resolve infection with Trichinella spiralis correlates with their ability to mount MMC responses in the intestinal mucosa. Homologues of MMC that express and constitutively secrete abundant amounts of the granule chymase, mouse mast cell protease-1 (mMCP-1), can be generated in vitro from bone marrow cultures supplemented with interleukins-3 and -9, stem cell factor and transforming growth factor-beta1. Using the enhanced growth characteristics of these MMC homologues, a novel limiting dilution assay for mast cell precursor (MCp) frequency has been developed. The assay is highly specific, in that cultures containing mast cells are identified with mMCP-1 specific antibody, and almost three-fold more sensitive than previously published systems. MCp frequencies were compared in BALB/c and C57/BL10 strains of mice that, respectively, respond rapidly and slowly to infection with T. spiralis. MCp frequency (1/378 bone marrow cells) was significantly greater in BALB/c than C57/BL10 mice (frequency: 1/751). Similarly the rate of growth of MMC homologues and the production of mMCP-1 was significantly greater in BALB/c than in C57/BL10 bone marrow cultures.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号