Abstract
In vitro exposure of mast but not of other cells of rat peritoneal fluid to epinephrine leads, within 1 min, to progressing levels of histamine in both fluid and sedimentable phases of the incubates, which present no increase in their free/total histamine ratio. Histamine increase was blocked by α-fluoromethyl histidine (αFMH), acting after a significant lag period. When compared with controls under the electron microscope, epinephrine-treated mast cells show less electron-dense, swollen intercellular granules, apparent maintenance of cell membrane continuity and an apparent decrease of peripheral finger-like projections. Histamine accumulation by epinephrine-treated mast cells may be the result of an enhanced ability of pre-formed mast cell histidine decarboxylase to attack its cell-borne substrate, consequent to an unfolding of the cell membrane during cell tumefaction evoked by epinephrine.
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