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Retinoic Acid Negatively Impacts Proliferation and MC(TC) Specific Attributes of Human Skin Derived Mast Cells, but Reinforces Allergic Stimulability

The Vitamin-A-metabolite retinoic acid (RA) acts as a master regulator of cellular programs. Mast cells (MCs) are primary effector cells of type-I-allergic reactions. We recently uncovered that human cutaneous MCs are enriched with RA network components over other skin cells. Yet, direct experimenta...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Babina, Magda, Artuc, Metin, Guhl, Sven, Zuberbier, Torsten
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5372541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28264498
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18030525
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author Babina, Magda
Artuc, Metin
Guhl, Sven
Zuberbier, Torsten
author_facet Babina, Magda
Artuc, Metin
Guhl, Sven
Zuberbier, Torsten
author_sort Babina, Magda
collection PubMed
description The Vitamin-A-metabolite retinoic acid (RA) acts as a master regulator of cellular programs. Mast cells (MCs) are primary effector cells of type-I-allergic reactions. We recently uncovered that human cutaneous MCs are enriched with RA network components over other skin cells. Yet, direct experimental evidence on the significance of the RA-MC axis is limited. Here, skin-derived cultured MCs were exposed to RA for seven days and investigated by flow-cytometry (BrdU incorporation, Annexin/PI, FcεRI), microscopy, RT-qPCR, histamine quantitation, protease activity, and degranulation assays. We found that while MC size and granularity remained unchanged, RA potently interfered with MC proliferation. Conversely, a modest survival-promoting effect from RA was noted. The granule constituents, histamine and tryptase, remained unaffected, while RA had a striking impact on MC chymase, whose expression dropped by gene and by peptidase activity. The newly uncovered MRGPRX2 performed similarly to chymase. Intriguingly, RA fostered allergic MC degranulation, in a way completely uncoupled from FcεRI expression, but it simultaneously restricted MRGPRX2-triggered histamine release in agreement with the reduced receptor expression. Vitamin-A-derived hormones thus re-shape skin-derived MCs numerically, phenotypically, and functionally. A general theme emerges, implying RA to skew MCs towards processes associated with (allergic) inflammation, while driving them away from the skin-imprinted MC(TC) (“MCs containing tryptase and chymase”) signature (chymase, MRGPRX2). Collectively, MCs are substantial targets of the skin retinoid network.
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spelling pubmed-53725412017-04-10 Retinoic Acid Negatively Impacts Proliferation and MC(TC) Specific Attributes of Human Skin Derived Mast Cells, but Reinforces Allergic Stimulability Babina, Magda Artuc, Metin Guhl, Sven Zuberbier, Torsten Int J Mol Sci Article The Vitamin-A-metabolite retinoic acid (RA) acts as a master regulator of cellular programs. Mast cells (MCs) are primary effector cells of type-I-allergic reactions. We recently uncovered that human cutaneous MCs are enriched with RA network components over other skin cells. Yet, direct experimental evidence on the significance of the RA-MC axis is limited. Here, skin-derived cultured MCs were exposed to RA for seven days and investigated by flow-cytometry (BrdU incorporation, Annexin/PI, FcεRI), microscopy, RT-qPCR, histamine quantitation, protease activity, and degranulation assays. We found that while MC size and granularity remained unchanged, RA potently interfered with MC proliferation. Conversely, a modest survival-promoting effect from RA was noted. The granule constituents, histamine and tryptase, remained unaffected, while RA had a striking impact on MC chymase, whose expression dropped by gene and by peptidase activity. The newly uncovered MRGPRX2 performed similarly to chymase. Intriguingly, RA fostered allergic MC degranulation, in a way completely uncoupled from FcεRI expression, but it simultaneously restricted MRGPRX2-triggered histamine release in agreement with the reduced receptor expression. Vitamin-A-derived hormones thus re-shape skin-derived MCs numerically, phenotypically, and functionally. A general theme emerges, implying RA to skew MCs towards processes associated with (allergic) inflammation, while driving them away from the skin-imprinted MC(TC) (“MCs containing tryptase and chymase”) signature (chymase, MRGPRX2). Collectively, MCs are substantial targets of the skin retinoid network. MDPI 2017-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5372541/ /pubmed/28264498 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18030525 Text en © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Babina, Magda
Artuc, Metin
Guhl, Sven
Zuberbier, Torsten
Retinoic Acid Negatively Impacts Proliferation and MC(TC) Specific Attributes of Human Skin Derived Mast Cells, but Reinforces Allergic Stimulability
title Retinoic Acid Negatively Impacts Proliferation and MC(TC) Specific Attributes of Human Skin Derived Mast Cells, but Reinforces Allergic Stimulability
title_full Retinoic Acid Negatively Impacts Proliferation and MC(TC) Specific Attributes of Human Skin Derived Mast Cells, but Reinforces Allergic Stimulability
title_fullStr Retinoic Acid Negatively Impacts Proliferation and MC(TC) Specific Attributes of Human Skin Derived Mast Cells, but Reinforces Allergic Stimulability
title_full_unstemmed Retinoic Acid Negatively Impacts Proliferation and MC(TC) Specific Attributes of Human Skin Derived Mast Cells, but Reinforces Allergic Stimulability
title_short Retinoic Acid Negatively Impacts Proliferation and MC(TC) Specific Attributes of Human Skin Derived Mast Cells, but Reinforces Allergic Stimulability
title_sort retinoic acid negatively impacts proliferation and mc(tc) specific attributes of human skin derived mast cells, but reinforces allergic stimulability
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5372541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28264498
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18030525
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