| Literature DB >> 34603768 |
I P Grigorev1, D E Korzhevskii2.
Abstract
Mast cells play an important role in the body defense against allergens, pathogens, and parasites by participating in inflammation development. However, there is evidence for their contributing to the pathogenesis of a number of atopic, autoimmune, as well as cardiovascular, oncologic, neurologic, and other diseases (allergy, asthma, eczema, rhinitis, anaphylaxis, mastocytosis, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory gastrointestinal and pulmonary diseases, migraine, etc.). The diagnosis of many diseases and the study of mast cell functions in health and disease require their identification; so, the knowledge on adequate imaging techniques for mast cells in humans and different species of animals is of particular importance. The present review summarizes the data on major methods of mast cell imaging: enzyme histochemistry, immunohistochemistry, as well as histochemistry using histological stains. The main histological stains bind to heparin and other acidic mucopolysaccharides contained in mast cells and stain them metachromatically. Among these are toluidine blue, methylene blue (including that contained in May-Grünwald-Giemsa stain), thionin, pinacyanol, and others. Safranin and fluorescent dyes: berberine and avidin - also bind to heparin. Longer staining with histological dyes or alcian blue staining is needed to label mucosal and immature mast cells. Advanced techniques - enzyme histochemistry and especially immunohistochemistry - enable to detect mast cells high-selectively using a reaction to tryptases and chymases (specific proteases of these cells). In the immunohistochemical study of tryptases and chymases, species-specific differences in the distribution of the proteases in mast cells of humans and animals should be taken into account for their adequate detection. The immunohistochemical reaction to immunoglobulin E receptor (FcεRI) and c-kit receptor is not specific to mast cells, although the latter is important to demonstrate their proliferation in normal and malignant growth. Correct fixation of biological material is also discussed in the review as it is of great significance for histochemical and immunohistochemical mast cell detection. Fluorescent methods of immunohistochemistry and a multimarker analysis in combination with confocal microscopy are reported to be new technological approaches currently used to study various mast cell populations.Entities:
Keywords: alcian blue; chymase; histochemistry; immunohistochemistry; mast cells; safranin; toluidine blue; tryptase
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34603768 PMCID: PMC8482833 DOI: 10.17691/stm2021.13.4.10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sovrem Tekhnologii Med ISSN: 2076-4243
Serine proteinase of human mast cells and laboratory animals
| Species | Serosal mast cells | Mucosal mast cells | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tryptases | Chymases | Tryptases | Chymases | |
| Human | Tryptase | Chymase | Tryptase | None |
| Mouse | mMCP-6, mMCP-7 | mMCP-4, mMCP-5 | None | mMCP-1, mMCP-2 |
| Rat | rMCP-6, rMCP-7 | rMCP-1, rMCP-5 | None | rMCP-2, -3, -4, -8, -9, -10 |
Human mast cell markers and mast cell detection techniques
| Markers | Cell type | Staining technique | Additionally stained structures | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Sulfated glycosaminoglycans (including heparin) | Mature serosal mastocytes, a part of mucosal mastocytes | Macrophages, basophilic leukocytes, goblet cells, Clara cells | Toluidine blue and methylene blue staining is the easiest and most effective method to detect most mastocytes | |
| 2. Heparin | Mature serosal mastocytes | Basophilic leukocytes For avidin — any cells containing biotin | Berberine, avidin are highly selective markers of heparin, but berberine does not cause fluorescence in human skin mastocytes | |
| 3. Chondroitin sulfate Е | Mucosal and immature mastocytes | Components of connective tissue intercellular substance | Frequently used in combination with safranin O for simultaneous detection of mucous and serosal mastocytes | |
| 4. Tryptase | Serosal and mucosal mastocytes | Leder’s reaction | None | Tryptase immunohistochemistry is the most effective technique to detect human mastocytes Leder’s reaction reveals an active enzyme alone |
| 5. Chymase | Serosal mastocytes | Leder’s reaction | None | Leder’s reaction reveals an active enzyme alone |
| 6. c-kit (CD117) | Mastocytes | Immunohistochemistry | Stem cells, germinal cells, epithelial cells, interstitial cells of Cajal, melanocytes and basal skin cells, neurons, gliocytes | Also used as a tumor marker |
| 7. Immunoglobulin receptor Е (FcεRI) | Mastocytes | Immunohistochemistry | Basophilic leukocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, epidermal Langerhans cells | |
| 8. Histamine | Mastocytes (primarily, serosal) | Immunohistochemistry Histochemistry | Some neurons, histamine-containing epithelial endocrine cells of the stomach, basophilic leukocytes, neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages, dendritic cells | |
| 9. Serotonin | Mastocytes (primarily, serosal) | Immunohistochemistry Histochemistry | Neurons, gustatory receptor cells, glomus cells of carotid bodies, enterochromaffin cells, trophoblast, decidual cells, keratinocytes, fibroblasts, melanocytes, platelets | |
| 10. Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1 (VEGFR-1) | Mastocytes | Immunohistochemistry | Endothelial vascular cells, epithelial cells of the uterus and bronchi, type 2 pneumocytes, cytotrophoblasts, interstitial cells of testicles, Т lymphocytes, monocytes, micro- and astroglia, neurons | Also used as a tumor marker |
Note: the most effective markers for mast cell detection exhibiting the highest specificity are highlighted in bold; numbers 6–10 represent less selective mast cell markers, their usage can result in obtaining erroneous results.