Ancient origin of mast cells

GW Wong, L Zhuo, K Kimata, BK Lam, N Satoh… - Biochemical and …, 2014 - Elsevier
GW Wong, L Zhuo, K Kimata, BK Lam, N Satoh, RL Stevens
Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 2014Elsevier
The sentinel roles of mammalian mast cells (MCs) in varied infections raised the question of
their evolutionary origin. We discovered that the test cells in the sea squirt Ciona intestinalis
morphologically and histochemically resembled cutaneous human MCs. Like the latter, C.
intestinalis test cells stored histamine and varied heparin· serine protease complexes in their
granules. Moreover, they exocytosed these preformed mediators when exposed to
compound 48/80. In support of the histamine data, a C. intestinalis-derived cDNA was …
Abstract
The sentinel roles of mammalian mast cells (MCs) in varied infections raised the question of their evolutionary origin. We discovered that the test cells in the sea squirt Ciona intestinalis morphologically and histochemically resembled cutaneous human MCs. Like the latter, C. intestinalis test cells stored histamine and varied heparin·serine protease complexes in their granules. Moreover, they exocytosed these preformed mediators when exposed to compound 48/80. In support of the histamine data, a C. intestinalis-derived cDNA was isolated that resembled that which encodes histidine decarboxylase in human MCs. Like heparin-expressing mammalian MCs, activated test cells produced prostaglandin D2 and contained cDNAs that encode a protein that resembles the synthase needed for its biosynthesis in human MCs. The accumulated morphological, histochemical, biochemical, and molecular biology data suggest that the test cells in C. intestinalis are the counterparts of mammalian MCs that reside in varied connective tissues. The accumulated data point to an ancient origin of MCs that predates the emergence of the chordates >500 million years ago, well before the development of adaptive immunity. The remarkable conservation of MCs throughout evolution is consistent with their importance in innate immunity.
Elsevier