Abstract: | The effect of lysophosphatidylserine on immunological histamine release has been studied in rat peritoneal mast cells actively sensitized with horse serum and in human basophils challenged with anti-IgE. In contrast to other lysophospholipids, lysophosphatidylserine enhances the immunological histamine release in rat mast cells. The effect shows the kinetics of a saturable process with an apparent Km for lysophosphatidylserine of 0.26 microM. A similar Km value (0.21 microM) is found when measuring the non-immunological histamine release activated by lysophosphatidylserine plus nerve growth factor. A comparison with phosphatidylserine shows that a half-maximal response to lysophosphatidylserine occurs at a concentration 4-times lower. In addition, the magnitude of the response is higher. At variance with rat mast cells, lysophosphatidylserine does not influence the histamine release elicited by immunological and non-immunological stimuli in human basophils. The histamine secretion in these cells is instead affected by a calcium ionophore or tetradecanoylphorbolacetate, a compound producing activation of protein kinase C. |