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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2005 Nov 28;62(23):2867–2876. doi: 10.1007/s00018-005-5289-7

Divergent effects of the major mast cell products histamine, tryptase and TNF-alpha on human fibroblast behaviour

M Albrecht 1, M B Frungieri 1,2, L Kunz 1, R Rämsch 1, V Meineke 3, F M Köhn 4, A Mayerhofer 1,
PMCID: PMC11139064  PMID: 16314928

Abstract.

Fibroblast proliferation is a key process in tissue remodeling and mast cells (MCs) are thought to play a crucial role. Having established that the three major MC products, tryptase, histamine and TNF-alpha (TNF) are normally present in human skin MCs, which are in close proximity to dermal fibroblasts, we studied their individual effects on cell cycle-controlled human dermal fibroblasts (HFFF2). These cells express receptors (H1, PAR2, TNFR1/2) for the major MC mediators, but only tryptase or a PAR2 agonist peptide stimulated proliferation and gene expression. TNF was antimitotic, and histamine, while elevating intracellular Ca2+ levels at high concentrations, did not affect proliferation. We conclude that MC products but also composition and numbers of respective receptors on fibroblasts are crucially responsible for fibroproliferative events.

Key words. Mast cell, histamine, tryptase, TNF-alpha, tissue remodeling, proliferation, calcium

Footnotes

Received: 28 June 2005; received after revision 28 September 2005; accepted 6 October 2005


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