Abstract

Human mast cell precursors arise in the bone marrow and circulate to different tissue microenvironments, where they develop distinct phenotypes that may be characterized by differential expression of the serine protease, chymase. The growth and development of mast cells is stimulated by mast cell growth factor, which is also known as kit ligand because its obligate receptor is KIT, the protein product of the c-KIT proto-oncogene. The in vivo influence of the KIT-kit ligand axis on the phenotype of human mast cells has not been determined. We used immunohistochemistry to detect in situ expression of tryptase and chymase by mast cells of a patient with urticaria pigmentosa and aggressive systemic mastocytosis, whose pathologic mast cells are clonally derived and chronically stimulated by KIT because they all contain the same point mutation causing constitutive activation of KIT. Mast cells in both spleen and skin expressed tryptase, but only in the skin did a majority of mast cells express chymase. We conclude that chronic stimulation of the KIT-kit ligand axis does not irrevocably commit mast cells to a chymase-positive or chymase-negative phenotype. These findings suggest that factors other than kit ligand predominate in determining mast cell phenotype.

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