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1.
Abstract. It has recently become possible to grow basophil/mast cells in vitro for extended periods of time. Normally, these cultures remain fully dependent upon the presence of an adequate supply of growth factor(s) and the cells express several basophil/mast cell differentiated traits. We report here a case of spontaneous, in vitro, malignant transformation of such a basophil/mast cell line. The transformed cells no longer require the addition of growth factor(s) for continuous proliferation in vitro, and they have become highly tumorigenic in vivo. In contrast, when compared to their untransformed counterparts, they display the same set of differentiated traits, characteristic of immature basophil/mast cells. Thus, the data support the hypothesis that cell transformation results from a decreased sensitivity of precursor cells toward normal growth regulators but does not affect significantly the expression of differentiated functions.  相似文献   

2.
Few peribronchial mast cells are noted either in the lungs of naive mice or in the lungs of OVA-sensitized mice challenged acutely with OVA by inhalation. In this study, we demonstrate that OVA-sensitized mice exposed to repetitive OVA inhalation for 1-6 mo have a significant accumulation of peribronchial mast cells. This accumulation of peribronchial mast cells is associated with increased expression of the Th2 cell-derived mast cell growth factors, including IL-4 and IL-9, but not with the non-Th2 cell-derived mast cell growth factor, stem cell factor. Pretreating mice with immunostimulatory sequences (ISS) of DNA containing a CpG motif significantly inhibited the accumulation of peribronchial mast cells and the expression of IL-4 and IL-9. To determine whether mast cells express Toll-like receptor-9 (TLR-9; the receptor for ISS), TLR-9 expression by mouse bone marrow-derived mast cells (MBMMCs) was assessed by RT-PCR. MBMMCs strongly expressed TLR-9 and bound rhodamine-labeled ISS. However, incubation of MBMMCs with ISS in vitro neither inhibited MBMMC proliferation nor inhibited Ag/IgE-mediated MBMMC degranulation, but they did induce IL-6. Overall these studies demonstrate that mice exposed to repetitive OVA challenge, but not acute OVA challenge, have an accumulation of peribronchial mast cells and express increased levels of mast cell growth factors in the lung. Although mast cells express TLR-9, ISS does not directly inhibit mast cell proliferation in vitro, suggesting that ISS inhibits accumulation of peribronchial mast cells in vivo by indirect mechanism(s), which include inhibiting the lung expression of Th2 cell-derived mast cell growth factors.  相似文献   

3.
The oligodendrocyte-type-2 astrocyte progenitor cells (precursors of oligodendrocytes and type-2 astrocytes) are an excellent system in which to study differentiation as they can be manipulated in vitro. Maintenance of oligodendrocyte-type-2 astrocyte progenitor cells requires basic fibroblast growth factor, a growth factor whose action normally depends on a heparan sulfate coreceptor. Biochemical analysis revealed a most surprising result: that the oligodendrocyte-type-2 astrocyte progenitors did not synthesize heparan sulfate, the near ubiquitous N-sulfated cell surface polysaccharide, but the chemically related heparin in a form that was almost completely N- and O-sulfated. The heparin was detected in the pericellular fraction of the cells and the culture medium. In contrast the differentiated glial subpopulations (oligodendrocytes and type-2 astrocytes) synthesized typical heparan sulfate but with distinctive fine structural features for each cell type. Thus heparin is a unique differentiation marker in the glial lineage. Previously heparin has been found only in a subset of mature mast cells called the connective tissue mast cells. Its presence within the developing nervous system on a precise population of progenitors may confer specific and essential recognition properties on those cells in relation to binding soluble growth and/or differentiation factors and the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

4.
Basophils constitute 50 to 63% of the blood leukocytes in Chelydra serpentina, the snapping turtle. Immunoglobulin (Ig) on the surface of the turtle basophil was detected by indirect immunofluorescence by using an IgG fraction from rabbit anti-turtle Ig serum (RATIg) and a fluoresceinated goat anti-rabbit antibody incubated at 4 degrees C. However, when the cells were incubated with RATIg at 22 degrees C, the basophil number, as determined by Wright's stain and neutral red counts, decreased dramatically. This morphologic evidence of degranulation was directly proportional to the antiserum concentration. Degranulation also correlated with cell histamine release (r = 0.73). In other experiments, turtle basophils were found to express antigen-specific surface Ig after immunization with sheep red blood cells (SRBC). Washed basophils from immunized turtles formed basophil-SRBC rosettes in vitro. Basophils from control turtles did not. Basophil-SRBC rosettes could also be induced by in vitro passive sensitization by preincubation of normal turtle basophils in the SRBC immune turtle sera. This study shows clearly that the turtle basophil has an immune capacity analogous to the mammalian basophil/mast cell. This study also contains the first direct evidence for the existence of reaginic antibody (or antibodies) in an ectothermic vertebrate. Finally, C. serpentina is proposed as a unique animal model for the study of basophil function.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Free cytosolic calcium ([Ca2+]i) levels increase after the stimulation of either human basophils or mast cells with anti-IgE antibody. Previous studies found that the mast cell [Ca2+]i response was graded in magnitude, according to stimulus strength, and that the activated level was free of oscillations. The current studies demonstrate several new features of the mast cell and basophil response. First, in mast cells, the transition to activated [Ca2+]i levels was abrupt (width = 6.5 +/- 2 s), after a period of quiescence whose duration (5 to 300 s) was a function of the strength of the stimulus. At optimal concentrations of anti-IgE, 97% of mast cells showed only abrupt transitions and oscillation-free activated calcium levels. In contrast, basophils showed marked oscillations whose magnitudes were partially dependent on the strength of stimulus. Like the mast cell, there was a quiescent period before the first transition and this period was also dependent on the strength of the stimulus. Oscillations were generally superimposed on an elevated [Ca2+]i level at a frequency of 0.5 to 3/min, had half-widths of 5 to 20 s, and were markedly chaotic in the frequency domain. In general, oscillations were more apparent at suboptimal concentrations of anti-IgE. Despite the apparent contrast in basophil and mast cell responses, oscillations (1 or 2 in a 10-min period) could be observed in a small percentage of mast cells and some basophils showed characteristics of mast cells. We tentatively conclude that mast cells and basophils utilize a similar mechanism of calcium mobilization but that the nonlinear characteristics of the calcium response may account for the mast cell/basophil differences. These studies indicated that the calcium kinetics, as measured by population averages, did not reflect the kinetics observed at the single cell level. Both mast cells and basophils had characteristics which could be described as graded and characteristics resembling all-or-nothing processes; the magnitude of a response was graded according the strength of stimulus while the kinetics profile appeared as an all-or-nothing event.  相似文献   

7.
Human lung macrophages obtained from surgical specimens spontaneously secreted a factor(s) (which we term macrophage factor) during 24-hr culture that induced calcium-dependent histamine release from human basophils and lung mast cells. Macrophage factor induced noncytotoxic histamine release from purified (85%) basophils. The kinetics of release were relatively slow and similar to that of anti-IgE. We performed a series of experiments to test the IgE dependence of macrophage factor-induced release. Preincubation of basophils with anti-IgE in calcium-free medium resulted in complete desensitization to macrophage factor-induced histamine release (i.e., when calcium and macrophage factor were added to the basophils, no histamine release occurred), and preincubation with macrophage factor in calcium-free medium resulted in partial desensitization to anti-IgE-induced histamine release. Pretreatment of basophils with pH 3.9 lactic acid buffer, which dissociates basophil IgE from its receptors, markedly reduced the capacity of basophils to release histamine in response to macrophage factor. Basophils that were incubated with IgE myeloma (but not with IgG) after lactic acid treatment partially or completely regained their capacity to release histamine in response to macrophage factor. Fluid-phase IgE myeloma (15 micrograms/ml) (but not IgG) inhibited basophil histamine release induced by two macrophage-derived supernatants, whereas IgE myeloma (200 micrograms/ml) did not inhibit release due to other supernatants. IgE-affinity columns removed the histamine-releasing activity of five macrophage-derived supernatants, and IgG-affinity columns had similar effects. However, neither affinity column removed the histamine-releasing activity of three other macrophage-derived supernatants. On Sephadex G-75 chromatography, nearly all of the histamine-releasing activity migrated as single peak with an apparent m.w. of 18,000. These results suggest that, although macrophage factor are heterogeneous, they are related, as they are a IgE-dependent factors that induce histamine release by interacting with cell surface IgE. These macrophage factors may be responsible for stimulation of basophil/mast cell mediator release in chronic allergic reactions.  相似文献   

8.
Erythropoietin (Epo), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor- (G-CSF) dependent cell lines have been derived from the murine hematopoietic cell line 32D with a selection strategy involving the culture of the cells in FBS-deprived medium supplemented only with pure recombinant Epo, GM-CSF, or G-CSF. The cells retain the diploid karyotype of the original 32D clone, do not grow in the absence of exogenous growth factor, and do not induce tumors when injected into syngeneic recipients. The morphology of the Epo-dependent cell lines (32D Epo1, -2, and -3) was heterogeneous and evolved with passage. The percent of differentiated cells also was a function of the cell line investigated. Benzidine-positive cells ranged from 1-2% (32D Epo3) to 50-60% (32D Epo1). These erythroid cells expressed carbonic anhydrase I and/or globin mRNA but not carbonic anhydrase II. The GM-CSF- and G-CSF-dependent cell lines had predominantly the morphology of undifferentiated myeloblasts or metamyelocytes, respectively. The GM-CSF-dependent cell lines were sensitive to either GM-CSF or interleukin-3 (IL-3) but did not respond to G-CSF. The G-CSF-dependent cell lines grew to a limited extent in IL-3 but did not respond to GM-CSF. These results indicate that the cell line 32D, originally described as predominantly a basophil/mast cell line, has retained the capacity to give rise to cells which proliferate and differentiate in response to Epo, GM-CSF, and/or G-CSF. These cells represent the first nontransformed cell lines which can be maintained in growth factors other than IL-3 and which differentiate in the presence of physiologic signals. As such, they may represent a model to study the molecular mechanisms underlying the process of hematopoietic differentiation, as well as sensitive targets for bioassays of specific growth factors.  相似文献   

9.
We report here the first demonstration of dengue virus infection and vasoactive cytokine response of a cell of the mast cell/basophil lineage. Infection of KU812 cells was dependent on dengue-specific antibody and gave rise to infectious virions. This antibody-enhanced dengue virus infection triggered a four- to fivefold increase in the release of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and a modest increase for IL-6 but not for an alternate cytokine, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor. The results suggest a potential role for mast cells/basophils in the pathogenesis of dengue virus-induced disease.  相似文献   

10.
Uptake of monoamines into secretory granules is mediated by the vesicular monoamine transporters VMAT1 and VMAT2. In this study, we analyzed their expression in inflammatory and hematopoietic cells and in patients suffering from systemic mastocytosis (SM) and chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Normal human and monkey tissue specimens and tissues from patients suffering from SM and CML were analyzed by means of immunohistochemistry, radioactive in situ hybridization, real time RT-PCR, double fluorescence confocal laser scanning microscopy, and immunoelectron microscopy. In normal tissue specimens, VMAT2, but not VMAT1, was expressed in mast cells, megakaryocytes, thrombocytes, basophil granulocytes, and cutaneous Langerhans cells. Further hematopoietic and lymphoid cells showed no expression of VMATs. VMAT2 was expressed in all types of SM, as indicated by coexpression with the mast cell marker tryptase. In CML, VMAT2 expression was retained in neoplastic megakaryocytes and basophil granulocytes. In conclusion, the identification of VMAT2 in mast cells, megakaryocytes, thrombocytes, basophil granulocytes, and cutaneous Langerhans cells provides evidence that these cells possess molecular mechanisms for monoamine storage and handling. VMAT2 identifies normal and neoplastic mast cells, megakaryocytes, and basophil granulocytes and may therefore become a valuable tool for the diagnosis of mastocytosis and malignant systemic diseases involving megakaryocytes and basophil granulocytes.  相似文献   

11.
As part of an ongoing investigation of human mast cell heterogeneity, we have isolated, partially purified, and characterized the uterine mast cell and compared it with mast cells isolated from other organs. The average histamine content of myometrium and leiomyofibroma obtained from hysterectomies was 2.1 +/- 0.3 (mean +/- SEM) microgram/g of tissue (n = 10), and the histamine content of the two tissues did not differ significantly. A mild collagenase, hyaluronidase, and DNase digestion was used to disperse the uterine mast cells, with an average yield of 9.5% (range, 0 to 21%). The average histamine/uterine mast cell was 2.1 +/- 0.2 pg (n = 3), and 61 +/- 7% (n= 3) of the uterine mast cells survived overnight culture. Early purification efforts with Percoll gradients have yielded up to 80% pure uterine mast cells, with an average of 27 +/- 10% (n = 5). Uterine mast cells released histamine in response to the secretogogues anti-IgE and A23187 but did not respond to substance P or to the basophil secretogogues FMLP, C5a, and 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. After 1 microgram/ml anti-IgE stimulation, the uterine mast cell appeared to make significant quantities of PGD2 (89 +/- 26 ng/10(6) cells, n = 6) (p less than 0.05), as assayed by RIA. Simultaneously, leukotriene C4 release was 45 +/- 15 ng/10(6) cells, (n = 6) (p less than 0.05), as assayed by RIA. Combined gas-chromatography mass spectroscopy analysis of anti-IgE-stimulated cell supernatants confirmed the production of PGD2. In pharmacologic studies, isobutyl-methylxanthine and isoproterenol blocked anti-IgE-induced histamine release. The uterine mast cell is similar to the lung mast cell in terms of response to secretogogues and release of arachidonic acid metabolites. Ultrastructurally, the uterine mast cell contains scroll granules, crystal granules, combined granules, homogeneously dense granules, and large lipid bodies, many with focal lucencies within them. Particle granules, most frequently present in gut mast cells of mucosal origin, were absent from uterine mast cells. Although certain features are analogous to the ultrastructure of skin or lung mast cells, the combination of structures is distinctive for uterine mast cells.  相似文献   

12.
Effect of disodium cromoglycate on cutaneous basophil anaphylaxis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cutaneous basophil anaphylaxis (CBA) was elicited by intradermal rechallenge of cutaneous basophil hypersensitivity (CBH) sites in guinea pigs sensitized 7 days previously with keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH). The antiallergy agent disodium cromoglycate (DSCG), administered i.v. immediately before rechallenge, inhibited the increased vasopermeability (measured by tissue dye uptake) and basophil degranulation (measured by light microscopic counts of intact basophils) characteristic of the CBA reaction. The antihistamine mepyramine, administered orally, inhibited vasopermeability but not basophil degranulation. The component contributed by DSCG inhibition of mast cell degranulation to the overall inhibition of the reaction was found to be minimal, since intact mast cells were found to be depleted at CBH sites and totally absent at CBA sites from animals treated with DSCG. Electron microscopic examination of basophils at CBA sites from DSCG-treated animals revealed the presence of ruffled perigranular membranes and enlarged perigranular spaces, but both the formation of degranulation sacs and the subsequent fusion of granule sac membranes with the plasma membrane were inhibited. DSCG also inhibited the vasopermeability and basophil degranulation of the CBA reaction elicited by KLH at day 14 and by C5a at day 7. When a basophil-enriched leucocyte preparation from KLH-sensitized guinea pigs was studied in vitro, DSCG inhibited both antigen-induced and C5a-induced basophil degranulation at 10(-5) and 10(-4) M. DSCG failed to inhibit the vasopermeability and the mast cell degranulation produced by either intradermal C5a or intradermal compound 48/80. These results indicate that anaphylactic degranulation of basophils, but not mast cells, is inhibited by DSCG in the guinea pig. This inhibition appears to take place independent of stimulus at an early stage of granule membrane fusion.  相似文献   

13.
Mast cell-fibroblast interactions have been extensively investigated in the last few years. Fibroblasts support the in vitro survival but not proliferation of mouse connective-tissue type mast cells. However, the factor(s) that allow their survival on fibroblast monolayers has not been identified. We have investigated the presence of mRNA for IL-3 and granulocyte-macrophage-CSF in single mouse mast cells, before and after co-culture with 3T3 fibroblasts, using the polymerase chain reaction technique. The system was calibrated first by using in vitro generated population of mouse bone-marrow derived mast cells (BMMC). Significant differences in the amplification of IL-3 cDNA were observed in each of the BMMC cells examined, whereas the amplification of cDNA for the alpha-subunit of the Fc epsilon RI were similar. Inasmuch as murine cultured IL-3-dependent mast cells differentiate into connective tissue-like mast cells when co-cultured with 3T3 fibroblasts without any exogenous supply of growth factors, it was of interest to determine whether these connective tissue-like mast cells produce IL-3 message. Separation of the differentiated BMMC from the fibroblast monolayer, by either trypsinization or by single cell manipulation revealed the synthesis of a detectable amount of IL-3 mRNA in these mast cells. Whether this IL-3 mRNA was induced by fibroblasts was further investigated using connective tissue mast cells freshly purified from the mouse peritoneal cavity. Only about 20% of these connective tissue mast cells produced detectable amount of granulocyte-macrophage-CSF mRNA whereas in less than 10% of the cells IL-3 mRNA was detected. However, when these connective tissue mast cells were co-cultured with 3T3 fibroblasts for 18 hours and then separated, IL-3 mRNA were detected in most of the cells whereas no such mRNA was detected in tissue mast cells incubated for 18 h with medium derived from 3T3 fibroblasts. Therefore we conclude that fibroblasts induce the accumulation of IL-3 mRNA in connective tissue mast cells. The production of IL-3 may play a role in the survival of this type of mast cells on the fibroblast monolayer.  相似文献   

14.
Picryl (trinitrophenyl) chloride (PCL) contact sensitization of mice induces T cells that release an antigen-binding T cell factor (PCLF) that plays an important role in the initiation of contact sensitivity responses, in part via activation of mast cells. The current study employs an in vitro indirect rosette assay to demonstrate that PCLF can interact with the mast cell surface. Sheep red blood cells (SRBC) were hapten conjugated with trinitrophenyl (TNP), dinitrophenyl (DNP), or oxazolone (OX). When TNP-conjugated SRBC were coated with PCLF, monoclonal anti-DNP IgE, or anti-DNP IgG1, they produced 40 to 50% rosettes with purified normal mouse peritoneal mast cells. Analogous antigen-binding factors, from lymphoid cells of OX and dinitrofluorobenzene contact-sensitized mice, gave similar mast cell rosetting levels with OX-SRBC and DNP-SRBC, respectively. PCLF demonstrated a high degree of hapten specificity in that it formed rosettes with TNP-SRBC but not with DNP-SRBC, unlike IgE and IgG1, or DNPF, which formed rosettes with either SRBC type. Similarly, soluble TNP-BSA could inhibit PCLF rosette-forming capacity, but soluble DNP-BSA could not. In addition to mouse mast cells, PCLF formed rosettes with rat basophil leukemia cells, mouse peritoneal exudate macrophages, mouse alveolar macrophages, and J 774 cultured mouse macrophages; it did not form rosettes with rat mast cells, rat alveolar macrophages, or mouse spleen cells. Thus, PCLF-formed rosettes were antigen specific, relatively species specific, and mast cell/macrophage specific. PCLF-mediated rosette-forming activity could be detected in the presence of nanogram quantities of PCLF. More than 10 times greater IgE was needed to produce IgE-mediated rosettes. Reduction and alkylation eliminated the rosetting activity of IgE, but the rosetting activity of PCLF was not affected. PCLF, but not IgE rosette-forming activity, could be removed by and eluted from affinity columns linked with a monoclonal antibody specific for T cell-derived antigen-binding factors, whereas PCLF rosetting activity was not retained by an anti-immunoglobulin affinity column. Preincubation of mast cells with rat myeloma IgE or mouse monoclonal IgE of various specificities blocked IgE rosettes but not PCLF-induced rosettes. Other immunoglobulin isotypes likewise did not block PCLF rosettes. However, PCLF rosettes could be blocked by preincubation of mast cells with OX factor (OXF),and OXF-mediated rosettes could be blocked similarly by PCLF. These results suggest that the antigen-binding T cell factor PCLF interacts with a unique receptor on the surface of mouse mast cells.  相似文献   

15.
Interleukin 3-dependent hematopoietic progenitor cell lines   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Several biological phenotypes of growth factor-dependent cell lines have been described in recent years, including those with T lymphocyte, neutrophil granulocyte, basophil/mast cell, B lymphocyte, and multipotential stem cell properties. The growth factors for each cell lineage are a subject of intense study. Continuous mouse bone marrow cultures infected with RNA type C viruses (retroviruses) produce nonadherent hematopoietic cells over a longer duration than control cultures. Marrow cultures derived from strains with spontaneously induced ecotropic endogenous retrovirus demonstrate a greater longevity than those from strains with no replicating virus. Cultures infected with murine leukemia virus also generate a greater number, compared with controls, of cloned permanent suspension cell lines dependent for growth on a 41,000-dalton glycoprotein (interleukin 3 [IL 3]). Some are multipotential with capacity for differentiation to erythroid, neutrophil, eosinophil, and basophil/mast cell types. Other cloned IL 3-dependent cell lines are committed to a single pathway. Studies with Friend spleen focus-forming virus indicate that the first effect in the marrow culture is mediated through a subset of adherent hematopoietic stem cells. Bone marrow culture-derived IL 3-dependent cell lines provide a model with which to study the role of viral genes in the control of differentiation and self-renewal capacity of hematopoietic stem cells.  相似文献   

16.
Some nonpathogenic bacteria were found to have protective effects in mouse models of allergic and autoimmune diseases. These "probiotics" are thought to interact with dendritic cells during Ag presentation, at the initiation of adaptive immune responses. Many other myeloid cells are the effector cells of immune responses. They are responsible for inflammation that accounts for symptoms in allergic and autoimmune diseases. We investigated in this study whether probiotics might affect allergic and autoimmune inflammation by acting at the effector phase of adaptive immune responses. The effects of one strain of Lactobacillus casei were investigated in vivo on IgE-induced passive systemic anaphylaxis and IgG-induced passive arthritis, two murine models of acute allergic and autoimmune inflammation, respectively, which bypass the induction phase of immune responses, in vitro on IgE- and IgG-induced mouse mast cell activation and ex vivo on IgE-dependent human basophil activation. L. casei protected from anaphylaxis and arthritis, and inhibited mouse mast cell and human basophil activation. Inhibition required contact between mast cells and bacteria, was reversible, and selectively affected the Lyn/Syk/linker for activation of T cells pathway induced on engagement of IgE receptors, leading to decreased MAPK activation, Ca(2+) mobilization, degranulation, and cytokine secretion. Also, adoptive anaphylaxis induced on Ag challenge in mice injected with IgE-sensitized mast cells was abrogated in mice injected with IgE-sensitized mast cells exposed to bacteria. These results demonstrate that probiotics can influence the effector phase of adaptive immunity in allergic and autoimmune diseases. They might, therefore, prevent inflammation in patients who have already synthesized specific IgE or autoantibodies.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Mouse mast cells were differentiated and grown by culturing bone marrow cells in medium containing 2 X 10(-10) M purified interleukin 3 (IL 3). The cells obtained were similar in ultrastructure, membrane antigen phenotype, proteoglycan type, and lipid products generated upon immunologic activation to mast cells differentiated in culture by WEHI-3-conditioned medium (WEHI-3-CM) and by concanavalin A (Con A) splenocyte-conditioned medium. Phenotypically, these cells expressed IgE receptors and H-2 antigens and were recognized by a monoclonal antibody (B23.1) that did not react with mouse serosal heparin-containing mast cells. The classic phenotypic markers of mouse T cells or macrophages were not detected. The mouse mast cells differentiated with IL 3 as well as those differentiated in WEHI-3-CM incorporated [35S]sulfate into a nonheparin proteoglycan of 150,000 to 200,000 m.w. Most of the 35S-labeled macromolecules were degraded by chondroitinase ABC to yield only two disaccharides, which co-chromatographed on ascending thin layer chromatography with delta Di-4S and delta Di-diSE; thus, the proteoglycan in these cells is composed of chondroitin sulfate E glycosaminoglycans. After sensitization with monoclonal IgE, washing, and antigen activation, the IL 3 differentiated cells released the preformed mediator beta-hexosaminidase and generated and released two major classes of lipid mediators. The quantities of leukotriene C4 (LTC4), leukotriene B4 (LTB4), and platelet-activating factor (PAF-acether) generated/10(6) cells were 17, 3.0, and 3.1 ng, respectively. The ratio of these three lipid mediators was similar to that obtained from mast cells differentiated in WEHI-3-CM and in Con A-conditioned medium. Thus, T cell-derived IL 3 is the component present in the conditioned media that is required for differentiation and growth of the subclass of mast cells containing chondroitin sulfate E proteoglycan, designated E-MC. The IL 3-dependent E-MC may represent the in vitro counterpart of the T-cell-dependent mucosal mast cell, suggesting in turn that the production of LTC4 and LTB4 and of PAF-acether may play a role in adaptive intestinal immunity to helminthic parasites.  相似文献   

19.
Mast cells are a progeny of the multipotential hematopoietic stem cell. Most of progenies of the stem cell complete their differentiation within the bone marrow, but precursors of mast cells leave the bone marrow, migrate in blood, and invade into tissues. After the invasion, precursors proliferate and differentiate into mast cells. An appreciable proportion of mast cells retain proliferative potential after differentiation, and even after degranulation, some mast cells can proliferate and recover the original morphology. Proliferation of mast cells are regulated by both T cell-derived factors (i.e., IL-3 and IL-4) and fibroblast-derived factor(s). Mice of either W/Wv or Sl/Sld genotype lack mast cells, but mast cells do develop when bone marrow cells of W/Wv or Sl/Sld mice were cultured in the presence of T cell-derived factors. Mast cells derived from W/Wv mice cannot respond fibroblast-derived factor(s) and fibroblasts derived from Sl/Sld mice cannot support mast cells of normal mouse origin. Phenotypes of mast cells are determined by the environment in which the mast cells differentiated. However, when mast cells are transplanted into a new environment which is different from the original one, the mast cells acquire the phenotype which are dependent on the second environment.  相似文献   

20.
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