Nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates (NBPs, anti-bone-resorptive agents) have inflammatory side-effects. Alendronate (Ale, an NBP) intradermally injected into mouse ear-pinnae together with LPS (bacterial cell-wall component) induces augmented ear-swelling that depends on IL-1 and neutrophils. Using this model, we examined histamine's involvement in Ale + LPS-induced inflammation. Ale increased histamine in ear-pinnae by inducing histidine decarboxylase (HDC). This induction was augmented by LPS. In HDC-deficient mice, such augmented ear-swelling was not induced. At peak-swelling, 74.5% of HDC-expressing cells were neutrophils and only 0.2% were mast cells (MCs). The augmented swelling was markedly reduced by a histamine H4-receptor (H4R) antagonist, but not by an H1R antagonist. In MC-deficient mice, unexpectedly, Ale + LPS induced prolonged ear-swelling that was augmented and more persistent than in normal mice. MCs highly expressed H4Rs and produced MCP-1(inflammatory cytokine that recruits macrophages) and IL-10 (anti-inflammatory cytokine) in response to an H4R agonist. Histamine produced by HDC-induction mainly in infiltrated neutrophils stimulates H4Rs, leading to augmented Ale + LPS-induced ear-swelling via MCP-1 production by MCs. Since MCP-1 is produced by other cells, too, the contribution of MCs and their H4Rs to augmented ear-swelling is partial. In the later phase of the swelling, MCs may be anti-inflammatory via IL-10 production.