| Literature DB >> 35216365 |
Anna Sobiepanek1, Łukasz Kuryk2,3, Mariangela Garofalo4, Sandeep Kumar3, Joanna Baran1, Paulina Musolf1, Frank Siebenhaar5,6, Joachim Wilhelm Fluhr5,6, Tomasz Kobiela1, Roberto Plasenzotti7, Karl Kuchler8, Monika Staniszewska9.
Abstract
Mast cells (MCs) play important roles in normal immune responses and pathological states. The location of MCs on the boundaries between tissues and the external environment, including gut mucosal surfaces, lungs, skin, and around blood vessels, suggests a multitude of immunological functions. Thus, MCs are pivotal for host defense against different antigens, including allergens and microbial pathogens. MCs can produce and respond to physiological mediators and chemokines to modulate inflammation. As long-lived, tissue-resident cells, MCs indeed mediate acute inflammatory responses such as those evident in allergic reactions. Furthermore, MCs participate in innate and adaptive immune responses to bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. The control of MC activation or stabilization is a powerful tool in regulating tissue homeostasis and pathogen clearance. Moreover, MCs contribute to maintaining the homeostatic equilibrium between host and resident microbiota, and they engage in crosstalk between the resident and recruited hematopoietic cells. In this review, we provide a comprehensive overview of the functions of MCs in health and disease. Further, we discuss how mouse models of MC deficiency have become useful tools for establishing MCs as a potential cellular target for treating inflammatory disorders.Entities:
Keywords: allergic response; anti-pathogen defense; degranulation; immunotherapy; inflammation; mast cells; receptors; tumorigenesis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35216365 PMCID: PMC8875910 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23042249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Pattern recognition receptors on mast cells and signal transduction pathways. Plasma membrane of the mast cell is a platform for pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), such as myeloid C-type lectin receptor (Dectin), Toll-like receptor (TLR), and macrophage-inducible C-type lectin (Mincle). Mincle/Dectin 3 (family member 3), Dectin 2/3, Dectin-1, and TLR: 4/2, 4, 2/1, 2/6, 5, 3 were identified respectively as receptors for: alpha-mannose, alpha-mannan, beta-glucan, lipopolysaccharide (LPS); triacyl-, diacyl-lipopeptide, flagellin, and double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). In a stressed mast cell (e.g., viral, bacterial, and fungal infections), activation of PRRs triggers the cell signaling, leading to the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and degranulation. Mincle/Dectin3- and 2/3-dependent signaling activates tyrosine protein kinase Syk (known as spleen tyrosine kinase Syk) associated with protein kinase C (PKC) recruitment, resulting in mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mROS) production and involvement of the following: c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38). Dectin 1 triggers the activity of a low-molecular-weight GDP/GTP-binding guanine triphosphatase (Ras); this, in turn, promotes a cascade of events leading to activation of proto-oncogene serine/threonine-kinase isoform Raf 1. Stimulation of the cell-surface receptors leads to activation of kappa-light-chain-enhancer nuclear factor of activated B cells (NF-kappa B) and rapid changes in gene expression. Intracellular signaling pathway involves tyrosine-protein kinase Lyn (Lyn) undergoing phosphorylation/activation and triggering a cascade of signaling events mediated by activation of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) and phospholipase C (PLC) that results in the generation of second messengers: diacylglycerol (DAG) and inositol triphosphate (IP3), as well as in Ca2+ mobilization. DAG interacts with PKC, hence activating its influence on transcription and cytokine generation. Moreover, activation of NF-kappa B occurs through the intracellular docking proteins: myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88) and Toll/Interleukin-1 (TIR)-containing adaptor inducing interferon-beta (TRIF). Thus, the signal is transduced through: MyD88, TIR-containing adaptor protein (TIRAP), and TRIF-related adaptor molecule (TRAM).
Crosstalk of mast cells with other cell types via the release of mediators.
| Cell Origin | MC-Released Mediators | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immune cells | Eosinophils | Histamine, IL-5, IL-9, SCF, LTD4, PAF, PGD2, VEGF-A | [ |
| Basophils | Histamine, PAF, PGD2 | [ | |
| Neutrophils | Histamine, LTB4, PAF, heparin | [ | |
| Platelets | PAF | [ | |
| Monocytes | Histamine, LTD4, VEGF-A, PAF | [ | |
| Macrophages | Histamine, IL-13, IL-6, PAF, PGD2 | [ | |
| Dendritic cells | Histamine, PGE2, PGD2, VEGF-C, IL-13 | [ | |
| Innate lymphoid cells | IL-1β, IL-9, PGD2, LTD4 | [ | |
| NK cells | Histamine, heparin | [ | |
| CD4+/CD8+ T cells | Histamine, LTC4, LTD4, TNF-α | [ | |
| Th1 cells | Histamine | [ | |
| Th2 cells | Histamine, LTC4, LTD4, PGD2 | [ | |
| Tfh cells | IL-6 | [ | |
| B cells | Histamine, PAF, IL-5 | [ | |
| Treg cells | Histamine | [ | |
| Non-immune cells | Blood endothelial cells | Histamine, LTC4, LTD4, PGD2, PAF, VEGF-A, IL-13, IL-1β | [ |
| Lymphatic endothelial cells | VEGF-C, VEGF-D | [ | |
| Bronchial epithelia | IL-13, TNF-α, IL-9, TGF-β, PGD2 | [ | |
| Smooth-muscle cells | Histamine, LTC4, LTD4, PGD2, tryptase | [ | |
| Goblet cells | IL-13, LTE4 | [ | |
| Cardiomyocytes | Tryptase | [ | |
| Osteo-blasts/clasts | Histamine, osteopontin | [ | |
| Neurons | Histamine, NGF, SP, PGD2 | [ | |
| Adipocytes | IL-13 | [ | |
| Fibroblasts | Tryptase, PGD2, TNF-α, TGF-β, IL-13, IL-1β | [ | |
| Keratinocytes | Tryptase, PAF | [ |
Figure 2Mast cell-mediated modulation of cells of adaptive and innate immunity. Crosstalk of mast cells with other cells (dendritic, B and T, natural killer, fibroblasts, endothelium, smooth muscle, macrophages, and neurons) via the release of the following mediators: histamine, fibroblast 4 (FGF4), transforming growth factor (TGF-β), prostaglandin (PG) groups: D2 (PGD2) and E2 (PGE2), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GMCSF), tryptase, leukotriene (LT) groups: C4 (LTC4) and B4 (LTB4), chymase and interleukin (IL) group (IL-1,-3,-4,-5,-6,-8,-10,-12,-13,-33), tumor necrosis factor (TNFα), stem cell factor (SCF), lymphotactin, protein reported as a synonym for the human gene VPREB1 (encoding V-set pre-B cell surrogate light chain 1-IGI2), nitric oxide (NO), oxide (O2), chemokine (C-X-C motif, ligand 8, and CXCL8), platelet-derived growth factor-4 (PDGF4), toll like receptors (TLR), cyclooxygenase (COX2), nerve growth factor (NGF), platelet-activating factor (PAF), substance P (SP), tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) family. Co-stimulation by reciprocal signals between MCs and lymphocytes involves the ligand–receptor interactions as well as released mediators. The ligand–receptor interactions are marked as follows: L’ refers to the ligand of a corresponding receptor; TNF superfamily member 4 (OX40; also known as TNFRSF4 or CD134), major histocompatibility complex (MHC), T-cell receptor (TCR), inducible co-stimulator (ICOS), cluster of differentiation 40 (CD40), TNF superfamily member 9 (4-1BB, also known as TNFRSF9 or CD137), Intercellular Adhesion Molecule 1 (ICAM-1, also known as CD54), and lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA-1). Interaction of the MC-mediated histamine with other cell types includes endothelial cells and smooth muscle, neurons (H1R and H2R receptors), cells of the central nervous system (H3R), fibroblasts, macrophages, basophils, and eosinophils (H4R). Black up and down arrows represent the upregulation and downregulation.
Pro-tumorigenic or anti-tumorigenic role of mast cells.
| Pro-Tumorigenic Role of Mast Cells in Human Cancers | Pro-Tumorigenic Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|
| Bladder | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Genetic instability, DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Tumor cell growth (PAF), Immunosuppression (adenosine), Mesenchymal transition (beta TGF, IL-8), Tissue remodelling (Tryptase), Activation of STAT-3 (IL-6) | [ |
| Colorectal | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Genetic instability, DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Tumor cell growth (PAF) | [ |
| Esophagus | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Genetic instability, DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Tumor cell growth (PAF) | [ |
| Gastric | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Genetic instability, DNA & RNA damage (ROS) | [ |
| Hepatocellular | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Genetic instability, DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Tumor cell growth (PAF), Activation of STAT-3 (IL-6) | [ |
| Hodgkin’s lymphoma | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Immunosuppression (adenosine), Mesenchymal transition (beta TGF, IL-8), IL-13 (Macrophage 2 polarization) | [ |
| Melanoma | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Activation of STAT-3 (IL-6) | [ |
| Pancreas | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Genetic instability, DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Tumor cell growth (PAF) | [ |
| Prostate | Angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B, FGF-2, IL-8), Genetic instability, DNA & RNA damage (ROS) | [ |
| Thyroid | Tissue remodelling (Tryptase), Mesenchymal transition (beta TGF, IL-8), Genetic instability, DNA & RNA damage (ROS) | [ |
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| Breast | Cytotoxicity (TNF alpha), Cytotoxicity (ROS), Tumor growth inhibition (heparin), Tumor cell inhibition (cytolytic activity), Tumor cell apoptosis (IL-4, TNF) | [ |
| Colorectal | Cytotoxicity (TNF alpha), Cytotoxicity (ROS), Tumor growth inhibition (heparin), Tumor cell growth inhibition (IL-9) | [ |
| Lung | Cytotoxicity (TNF alpha), Cytotoxicity (ROS), Tumor growth inhibition (heparin), Tumor cell apoptosis (IL-4, TNF) | [ |
| Mesothelioma | Cytotoxicity (TNF alpha), Cytotoxicity (ROS), Tumor growth inhibition (heparin) | [ |
| Melanoma | Cytotoxicity (TNF alpha), Cytotoxicity (ROS), Tumor growth inhibition (heparin), Tumor cell growth inhibition (IL-9), APC maturation (histamine), Tumor cell inhibition (cytolytic activity) | [ |
| Ovarian | Cytotoxicity (TNF alpha), Cytotoxicity (ROS), Tumor growth inhibition (heparin), | [ |
| Pancreas | Cytotoxicity (TNF alpha), Cytotoxicity (ROS), Tumor growth inhibition (heparin), | [ |
| Prostate | Tumor cell apoptosis (IL-4, TNF), Immune cell recruitment and activation, Tumor cell growth inhibition (IL-9) | [ |
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| Colorectal | Cytotoxicity (ROS), DNA & RNA damage (ROS) | [ |
| Lung | Cytotoxicity (ROS), DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Genetic instability | |
| Prostate | DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Genetic instability | |
| Melanoma | DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Genetic instability | |
| Pancreatic | Cytotoxicity (ROS), DNA & RNA damage (ROS), Genetic instability | |
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| Colorectal | Mutations in | [ |
| Non-small cell lung cancer | Mutation in EGFR | [ |
| Renal | Biallelic inactivation of | [ |
Mediators secreted by mast cells during allergic reactions.
| Mediators | MC-Interacting Cell Types | Biological Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proteases | Endothelial cells, | Type-1 hypersensitivity, | [ |
| Growth factors | Vascular, | Regulation of the immune response, | [ |
| Proteases | Cells of the central nervous system, | Blood–brain barrier permeability | [ |
| Chemokines | Basophils and eosinophils | Pro-inflammatory effects, Process of chemotaxis, Stimulation of histamine and cytokine generation |
The role of mast cells in response to pathogenic and commensal microorganisms.
| Biological Agents | Localization | MC Subpopulation | Signaling/Recruitment | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Bacteroidetes | Gut | MMCs; MCPT1 | IL-9, ILC-2; Th9 | [ |
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| Peritoneum | BMMC-derived MCs | IL-4, IL-6, IL-12, IL-13, TNF-α, chemokines (CCL2/MCP-1, CCL7/MCP-3, CXCL2/MIP-2, CCL5/RANTES) | [ |
|
| Middle ear | BMMC-derived MCs | - | [ |
|
| Lung | BMMC-derived MCs | TNF-α, MCP-1, MIP-2, IL-6, Histamine | [ |
|
| Skin | BMMC-derived MCs | NF-α, MCP-1, MIP-2, and IL-6 | [ |
| Mucous membranes | BMMC-derived MCs, MMCs; MCPT1 | IL-9, ILC-2; Th9, IL-4, IL-6, IL-8; IL-13, TNF-α; Neutrophils, Macrophage crawling and migration | [ | |
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| Skin | BMMC-derived MCs | IL-6; IL-8 | [ |
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| Skin | BMMC-derived MCs | IL-4; IL-13; IgE | [ |
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| Mucosal intestine | MMCs | IL-4, IgE | [ |
|
| Mucosal intestine; vessels | BM-resident HPC | mMCP-1, IgE, IL-2, | [ |
|
| Cutaneous tissues | BMMCs | Β-hexosaminidase, TNF-α, Chymases (mMCP-1, mMCP-9), NO, IgE; IL-12; IFN-γ | [ |
|
| CLN; skin | MMCs | TNF-α; CCL2; CXCL1; MMP-9; IFN-γ | [ |
| DENV | Mucous membranes | MMCs | Tryptase, IL-1β | [ |
| Zika virus | Mucous membranes | MMCs | Histame, IL-9, Th2 | [ |
| Influenza and parainfluenza | Mucous membranes | MMCs | Th2, type I INF | [ |
| HIV-1gp120 | Vascularized tissues | MC progenitors in the blood | IgE | [ |
| Hepatitis C | Vascularized tissues | MC progenitors in the blood | IL-10, type I TNF | [ |
| Coronavirus | Mucous membranes of lungs | MMCs | Histamine, Protease, PGD2, LTC4, IL-1, IL-6, IL-33 | [ |
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| Mucosal gut | CTMC | TGF-β; ILC2; IL-9; Th9; Treg Foxp3; IL-10 | [ |
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| Mucous membrane | BMMC-derived MCs | Restrain myeloid cells | [ |
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| Skin | BMMC-derived MCs | IL-8, IgE | [ |
Drugs targeting MC-derived tumors.
| Drug | Target | Mode of Action | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Midostaurin | PKC alpha, VEGFR2, KIT | Antagonist and inhibitor | PubChem CID: 9829523 |
| WT and/or mutant FLT3 tyrosine kinases | Apoptosis of target leukemia cells expressing target receptors and mast cells, Antiproliferative activity, Interacts with OATP | ||
| Imatinib | BCRP | Inhibitor | PubChem CID: 5291 |
| MSCGFR KIT | Antagonist, multitarget | ||
| RET proto-oncogene | Inhibitor | ||
| HANGFR | Antagonist | ||
| PDGFRα | Antagonist | ||
| EDDCR 1 | Antagonist | ||
| KIT ABL1 | Inhibitor | ||
| Platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta | Antagonist | ||
| Dasatinib | KIT ABL1 | Multitarget-bind to both the active and inactive conformation of the ABL kinase domain | PubChem CID: 3062316 |
| Proto-oncogene KIT Src | Multitarget | ||
| Ephrin type-A receptor 2 | Antagonist | ||
| KIT Lck | Multitarget | ||
| KIT | Inhibitor | ||
| MSCGFR Kit | Antagonist | ||
| PDGFRP | Antagonist | ||
| STAT5B | Inhibitor | ||
| Abelson KIT2 | Multitarget | ||
| KIT Fyn | Multitarget | ||
| Nilotinib | KIT ABL1 | Inhibitor of BCR–ABL-binds to the inactive conformation of ABL | PubChem CID: 644241 |
| MSCGFR Kit | Antagonist | ||
| Tranilast | Hematopoietic prostaglandin D synthase | Inhibitor | PubChem CID: 5282230 |
| MAP kinases (extracellularly regulated kinase 1 and 2 and JNK) | Calcium channel blocker, Antineoplastic agent, Aryl hydrocarbon receptor agonist and a hepatoprotective agent, Inhibit TGF-β production, interferon-gamma, IL-6, IL-10, and IL-17 by lymphoid cells | ||
| Gabexate | Serine protease | Inhibitor, | PubChem CID: 3447 |
| Nafamostat mesylate | Serine protease | Inhibits enzyme: thrombin, Xa, and XIIa), The kallikrein–kinin system, The complement system, Pancreatic proteases and activation of protease-activated receptors (PARs), Lipopolysaccharide-induced nitric oxide production, apoptosis, Interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8. Antioxidant in TNF-α-induced ROS production | PubChem CID: 5311180 |
| Prothrombin | Inhibitor | ||
| Masitinib mesylate | Tyrosine-kinase PDGF and KIT | Inhibiting the stem cell factor that regulates mast cell tumor proliferation, Antiproliferative actions- targets the c-KIT pathway | PubChem CID: 25024769 |
| Avapritinib | MSCGFR KIT and PDGFR alpha |
Inhibitor | PubChem CID: 118023034 |
| Obatoclax | Apoptosis regulator Bcl-2 | Leads to release of apoptosis-inducing cytochromec | PubChem CID: 11404337 |
| Bcl-2 family of proteins | Displaces BH3 domains by activation of a pocket of the BcL-2 family member | ||
| Gemcitabine | Block DNA Replication DNA during the “S” phase (or DNA synthesis phase of the cell cycle), stopping normal development and division | Cross-linking/Alkylation | PubChem CID: 60750 |
| Ribonucleoside-diphosphate reductase large subunit | Blocks an enzyme which converts the cytosine nucleotide into the deoxy derivative | ||
| Thymidylate synthase | Blocks the incorporation of the thymidine nucleotide | ||
| UMP-CMP kinase | Inhibitor | ||
| Orantinib | KIT autophosphorylation VEGFR2 | Inhibitor | PubChem CID: 5329099 |
| Cromolyn | Protein S100-P | Antagonist | PubChem CID: 2882 |
| Calcium sensor | Ion channel blockade | ||
| Cellular calcium signaling | Blockade of signaling of heat shock protein or G-protein | ||
| Stabilizing mast cells | Prevents the subsequent release of mediators; |