Mast cells regulate the magnitude and the cytokine microenvironment of the contact hypersensitivity response

MU Norman, J Hwang, S Hulliger, CS Bonder… - The American journal of …, 2008 - Elsevier
MU Norman, J Hwang, S Hulliger, CS Bonder, J Yamanouchi, P Santamaria, P Kubes
The American journal of pathology, 2008Elsevier
The role that mast cells play during contact hypersensitivity (CS) response is unclear
because some studies have shown that mast cell-deficient mice have relatively intact CS
responses whereas others have shown opposing results. Mast cells secrete a wide range of
immunomodulatory mediators and can potentially influence the type of immune response
generated in the skin during CS. Therefore, we examined the type of microenvironment
generated during CS in both W/Wv mast cell-deficient and wild-type mice in response to …
The role that mast cells play during contact hypersensitivity (CS) response is unclear because some studies have shown that mast cell-deficient mice have relatively intact CS responses whereas others have shown opposing results. Mast cells secrete a wide range of immunomodulatory mediators and can potentially influence the type of immune response generated in the skin during CS. Therefore, we examined the type of microenvironment generated during CS in both W/Wv mast cell-deficient and wild-type mice in response to different immunizing doses of hapten (oxazolone). The CS response elicited after low-dose oxazolone was significantly diminished in W/Wv mice compared with wild-type mice. Unexpectedly, the CS response elicited in W/Wv mice immunized with high-dose oxazolone was more severe compared with wild-type mice. In addition, after immunization with high-dose oxazolone, the granulocyte infiltrate in W/Wv mice was increased by twofold compared with wild-type mice. A shift in the cytokine milieu toward the expression of type-1 cytokines as well as a significant increase in the local adhesion of neutrophils and CD4 T cells in the microvasculature of the skin was observed after hapten challenge in W/Wv mice immunized with high-dose oxazolone compared with wild-type mice. These results suggest that mast cells can act as regulators and inducers of the inflammatory response depending on immunizing stimulus strength.
Elsevier