Abstract

Corticosteroids are widely used to treat severe allergic and inflammatory disease in which mast cells have been implicated as playing an important role. It has been previously shown that in vivo treatment with large bolus doses of corticosteroid can induce a down regulation of the number of IMMC in the rat. Previous in vitro studies of the RBL cell line have shown that culture in the presence of high doses of dexamethasone can induce an increase in cellular histamine content similar to that induced by other agents known to reduce the rate of cell division such as 5-hydroxyurea or sodium butyrate. In our studies the rat mucosal mast cell like cell line RBL-2H3 was cultured in the continuous presence of dexamethasone for periods of up to 4 weeks. Cell-associated histamine levels were found not to increase significantly at the doses of the corticosteroid we used. Of greater interest was the observation that levels of the mucosal mast cell specific protease RMCPII were dramatically reduced in these dexamethasone-treated cultures even at doses that might be considered to be physiologically relevant. This effect could be observed at 3 days after dexamethasone treatment and a continued reduction of RMCPII content was noted up to 4 weeks, at which time RMCPII levels were less than 5% of the control values in 10(-7) M dexamethasone treated cells. 5-Hydroxyurea did not reduce cellular RMCPII content even at a concentration which substantially reduced the rate of cell division and significantly increased cell associated histamine content.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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