LOCAL DEVELOPMENT OF MAST-CELLS FROM BONE MARROW-DERIVED PRECURSORS IN THE SKIN OF MICE
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 53 (1), 142-147
Abstract
A mechanism to control development of mast cells was investigated in mice. Although mast cells in the skin of normal C57BL/6 mice were still of host type 290 days after irradiation and injection of bone marrow cells from beige (Chediak-Higashi syndrome, C57BL/6 bgJ/bgJ) mice, donor-type mast cells with giant granules appeared after painting of methylcholanthrene on the dorsal skin. Since donor-type mast cells appeared only at the painted portion of the skin, with an increase in the labeling index of such donor-type mast cells with 3H-thymidine, proliferation and differentiation of bone marrow-derived precursors of mast cells seem to be controlled locally. Although the morphologic feature of marrow-derived precursors was not identified, the finding that all fibroblasts cultured from the methylcholanthrene-treated skin were most of host type may exclude the possibility that fibroblasts are the precursors of mast cells.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mast cell granule formation in the beige mouse.Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1978
- DEVELOPMENT OF HEMATOPOIETIC SPLEEN COLONIES IN NONIRRADIATED GENETICALLY NORMAL MICE1977
- 3H‐THYMIDINE LABELED MAST CELLS IN MICE TREATED WITH 20‐METHYLCHOLANTHRENE: PROLIFERATION OF PRECURSOR CELLS, THEIR TRANSFORMATION INTO MAST CELLS AND MIGRATION OF THE LATTERActa Pathologica Japonica, 1976
- Histology and Cytochemistry of Human Skin III. Polymorphism and Chromotropy of Mast Cells1Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1953