Abstract

Mast cells are specialized secretory cells releasing multiple inflammatory mediators when activated. Activation requires antigen/IgE cross-linking of FcɛRI receptors, initiating a complex intracellular signalling cascade. Ceramide kinase (CERK) is a novel lipid kinase implicated in several inflammatory cellular signalling processes. We sought to investigate a role for CERK in FCɛRI/IgE-mediated mast-cell activation. The rat and human mast cell-lines RBL-2H3 and LAD-2, respectively, were stimulated via FcɛRI or with the active product of CERK [ceramide-1-phosphate (C-1P)]. Multiple end-points were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; histamine (pre-formed early-phase mediator), prostaglandin D₂ (PGD₂ - rapidly metabolized early-phase mediator) and interleukin (IL) -13 (de novo transcribed late-phase mediator). We demonstrated that C-1P alone induced release of histamine and PGD₂ and was additive to antigen-mediated activation. C-1P did not stimulate IL-13 by a statistically significant amount. Using a specific inhibitor of CERK, antigen-mediated release of histamine and PGD₂ was significantly inhibited. Finally, we identified that, for histamine, CERK was downstream of spleen tyrosine kinase, phosphoinositol-3 kinases and phospholipase C, but upstream of c-jun N-terminal kinase (JNK); while for PGD₂ CERK was positioned upstream of JNK, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase and cyclooxygense. We have identified a differential role for CERK in mast-cell activation and begun to elucidate its position in the mast cell-signalling cascade, thereby suggesting a model by which CERK may be mediating its effects. This type of study is essential for complete understanding of activation pathways that may eventually be used to identify new targets for drug discovery in inflammatory diseases.

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