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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Mast cells: the basics
- Mast cells are known to contribute to allergy and anaphylaxis
- Hypothetical physiological mast cell functions
- Studying human mast cell biology: challenges
- There are two widely used models of mast cell-deficient mice
- Mast cell deficiency can be “repaired” to confirm mast cell dependency
- Mast cells contribute to survival, bacteria clearance and neutrophil recruitment
- Mast cell-specific conditional mice and mice with deficiency in mast cell-restricted proteases
- Lack of mast cell-mediated responses in Cpa3Cre/+ mice
- Antibody-induced arthritis is dependent on c-Kit but independent of mast cells
- Mast cells in homeostasis and disease
- “Classical” mast cell populations
- Human mast cells from the same phenotype differ functionally in response to same stimuli
- Dual developmental origin of mast cells
- Mechanisms of mast cell activation (1)
- Mechanisms of mast cell activation (2)
- IgE-dependent activation during the allergic immune response
- MAS-related G protein-coupled receptor-X2 is a novel GPCR mainly expressed by MCTC
- The allergic effector unit (AEU)
- Early descriptions of secretory patterns from human mast cells
- Current models of mast cell regulated exocytosis
- Membrane-fusion along the secretory and endocytic pathways
- Models of mast cell degranulation in response to different stimuli
- Regulatory mechanisms controlling mast cell activation by FceRI signaling
- Mechanisms of mast cell inhibition via ITIM containing inhibitory receptors
- Siglec-8 ligation inhibits release of histamine and mast cell-mediated anaphylaxis via FceRIa
- β-adrenoreceptor (β-AR) agonists inhibit histamine release from human lung mast cells
- Adenosine receptors differentially limit mast cell activation
- Tetraspanins exhibit positive or negative regulatory roles in FceRI-mediated mast cell signaling
- Mediators released by mast cells upon activation
- Concentration and binding affinity of allergens modulate mast cell function
- Histamine receptors and mast cells
- Tryptase: the basics
- Tryptase and mast cell-mediated severe asthma
- Chymase: the basics
- Prostaglandin D2
- Acknowledgment
Topics Covered
- Mast cell morphology and their role in allergy and other inflammatory conditions
- Mast cell precursors, tissue residency, and phenotypes
- Mechanisms of mast cell activation and degranulation
- Mast cell activating and inhibitory receptors
- Mast cell mediator release
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Talk Citation
Piliponsky, A. (2020, March 30). The mast cells: the mastermind cells of the allergic inflammatory reaction [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 3, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/GKFC8527.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- No commercial/financial relationship to disclose.
Other Talks in the Series: Allergy - From Basics to Clinic
Transcript
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0:00
Hello. My name is Adrian Piliponsky.
I'm an Associate Professor of Pediatrics and Pathology at the University of Washington.
My laboratory is located at the Seattle Children's Research Institute in Seattle.
The overall goal of my research is to understand how mast cells and
basophils regulate the response of our immune system to bacterial infections.
Today, I will provide you with an overview of
mast cell biology and function with an emphasis on mast cell morphology,
the role of mast cells in allergies,
and other inflammatory conditions;
methyl precursors, tissue residency, and phenotypes.
Also, the mechanism by which mast cells get activated and degranulate,
mast cell activating and inhibitory receptors,
and the ability of mast cells that will lead to performing their duties,
to know about synthesis of lipid mediators, cytokines, and chemokines.
0:56
Mast cells are present in the phylogenesis from invertebrates to man.
In fact, invertebrates have specialized mast-like cells of mesoderm origin,
mainly devoted to defense mechanisms associated with the gut or the circulation.
Mast cells are long-lived tissue-resident cells with
an important role in many inflammatory settings, including allergic reactions.
They are key players in the inflammatory response as they can
be activated by many different antigens including
allergens, pathogens, and physiological mediators.
They look like round cells in the microscope with
an unilobular nucleus and dense granules,
as you can see in this picture.
They are located at the boundaries between tissues and the external environment;
for example, at mucosal surfaces of the gut and lungs,
in the skin and around blood vessels where they can promote host defense.
Mast cells can be distinguished from other cells in tissue sections by
metachromatic staining with basic aniline dyes such as aniline blue,
as expected here, also, in this picture.
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