Literature DB >> 1934031

Mast cells in rat dermis and jejunal lamina propria show a five-fold difference in unit granule volume.

I Hammel1, N Arizono, S J Galli.   

Abstract

The cytoplasmic granules of mast cells have a periodic multimodal size distribution in which the volumes of individual granules are integral multiples of the intermodal distance, a volume defined as the "unit granule" or v1. In this study, we used two 3-month-old male rats to analyze two classical mast cell subpopulations, dermal "connective tissue-type mast cells" and jejunal lamina propria "mucosal mast cells", for the morphometric characteristics of their cytoplasmic granules. Both v1 and the mean volume of individual cytoplasmic granules were much smaller in dermal than in jejunal mast cells (ratios of 1:5.5 and 1:4.2, respectively), but dermal mast cells contained 150% more granules per cell than did jejunal mast cells. The two types of mast cells did not differ significantly in total cell volume, nucleus volume, aggregate volume of cytoplasmic granules per cell or numbers of unit granules comprising a granule of mean volume. These findings add unit granule volume to the list of phenotypic characteristics which express significant variation in anatomically distinct populations of mast cells.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1934031     DOI: 10.1007/bf00398080

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Tissue Res        ISSN: 0302-766X            Impact factor:   5.249


  23 in total

Review 1.  New insights into "the riddle of the mast cells": microenvironmental regulation of mast cell development and phenotypic heterogeneity.

Authors:  S J Galli
Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  1990-01       Impact factor: 5.662

2.  Studies on the growth of mast cells in rats. Changes in granule size between 1 and 6 months.

Authors:  I Hammel; D Lagunoff; P G Krüger
Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  1988-10       Impact factor: 5.662

3.  Immunofluorescent localization of a serine protease in rat small intestine.

Authors:  R G Woodbury; G M Gruzenski; D Lagunoff
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1978-06       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Kinetics and staining properties of mast cells proliferating in rat small intestine tunica muscularis and subserosa following infection with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis.

Authors:  N Arizono; S Nakao
Journal:  APMIS       Date:  1988-11       Impact factor: 3.205

Review 5.  Mast cell heterogeneity: evidence and implications.

Authors:  K E Barrett; D D Metcalfe
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  1984-07       Impact factor: 8.317

6.  Stereological estimation of the volume-weighted mean volume of arbitrary particles observed on random sections.

Authors:  H J Gundersen; E B Jensen
Journal:  J Microsc       Date:  1985-05       Impact factor: 1.758

7.  Histochemical heterogeneity of dermal mast cells in athymic and normal rats.

Authors:  F Aldenborg; L Enerbäck
Journal:  Histochem J       Date:  1988-01

8.  Anatomical variation in mast cell nerve associations in the rat small intestine, heart, lung, and skin. Similarities of distances between neural processes and mast cells, eosinophils, or plasma cells in the jejunal lamina propria.

Authors:  N Arizono; S Matsuda; T Hattori; Y Kojima; T Maeda; S J Galli
Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  1990-05       Impact factor: 5.662

9.  Defective cytoplasmic granule formation. I. Abnormalities affecting tissue mast cells and pancreatic acinar cells of beige mice.

Authors:  I Hammel; A M Dvorak; S J Galli
Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  1987-03       Impact factor: 5.662

10.  Evidence for morphologic diversity of human mast cells. An ultrastructural study of mast cells from multiple body sites.

Authors:  N Weidner; K F Austen
Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  1990-07       Impact factor: 5.662

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  4 in total

1.  Localization of anionic constituents in mast cell granules of brachymorphic (bm/bm) mice by using avidin-conjugated colloidal gold.

Authors:  Ilan Hammel; Tanya Shoichetman; Dina Amihai; Stephen J Galli; Ehud Skutelsky
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  2010-02-03       Impact factor: 5.249

Review 2.  Regulation of secretory granule size by the precise generation and fusion of unit granules.

Authors:  Ilan Hammel; David Lagunoff; Stephen J Galli
Journal:  J Cell Mol Med       Date:  2010-04-19       Impact factor: 5.310

3.  The circadian clock is functional in eosinophils and mast cells.

Authors:  Anja Baumann; Simone Gönnenwein; Stephan C Bischoff; Hadas Sherman; Nava Chapnik; Oren Froy; Axel Lorentz
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 7.397

4.  The rat c-kit ligand, stem cell factor, induces c-kit receptor-dependent mouse mast cell activation in vivo. Evidence that signaling through the c-kit receptor can induce expression of cellular function.

Authors:  B K Wershil; M Tsai; E N Geissler; K M Zsebo; S J Galli
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1992-01-01       Impact factor: 14.307

  4 in total

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