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Mast cells in human airways: the culprit?

Erjefält, Jonas LU (2014) In European Respiratory Review 23(133). p.299-307
Abstract
By virtue of their undisputed role in allergy, the study of airway mast cells has focused on nasal and bronchial mast cells and their involvement in allergic rhinitis and asthma. However, recent mechanistic and human studies suggest that peripheral mast cells also have an important role in asthma, as well as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, respiratory infections and lung fibrosis. Pathogenic roles include immune-modulatory, pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic activities. Importantly, mast cells also actively downregulate inflammation and participate in the defence against respiratory infections. Another complicating factor is the notorious mast cell heterogeneity, where each anatomical compartment of the lung harbours site-specific... (More)
By virtue of their undisputed role in allergy, the study of airway mast cells has focused on nasal and bronchial mast cells and their involvement in allergic rhinitis and asthma. However, recent mechanistic and human studies suggest that peripheral mast cells also have an important role in asthma, as well as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, respiratory infections and lung fibrosis. Pathogenic roles include immune-modulatory, pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic activities. Importantly, mast cells also actively downregulate inflammation and participate in the defence against respiratory infections. Another complicating factor is the notorious mast cell heterogeneity, where each anatomical compartment of the lung harbours site-specific mast cell populations. Alveolar mast cells stand out as they lack the cardinal expression of the high affinity IgE receptor. Supporting the emerging concept of alveolar inflammation in asthma, alveolar mast cells shift to a highly FcϵRI-expressing phenotype in uncontrolled asthma. Site-specific and disease-associated mast cell changes have also recently been described in most other inflammatory conditions of the lung. Thus, in the exploration of new anti-mast cell treatment strategies the search has widened to include the lung periphery and the delicate task of identifying which of the countless potential roles are the critical disease modifying ones in a given clinical situation. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
European Respiratory Review
volume
23
issue
133
pages
299 - 307
publisher
European Respiratory Society
external identifiers
  • pmid:25176966
  • scopus:84906849980
ISSN
1600-0617
DOI
10.1183/09059180.00005014
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
54bb1c5a-0c34-4817-b851-cf126c76b3b2 (old id 4692707)
alternative location
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25176966?dopt=Abstract
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:05:32
date last changed
2023-10-26 10:40:17
@article{54bb1c5a-0c34-4817-b851-cf126c76b3b2,
  abstract     = {{By virtue of their undisputed role in allergy, the study of airway mast cells has focused on nasal and bronchial mast cells and their involvement in allergic rhinitis and asthma. However, recent mechanistic and human studies suggest that peripheral mast cells also have an important role in asthma, as well as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, respiratory infections and lung fibrosis. Pathogenic roles include immune-modulatory, pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic activities. Importantly, mast cells also actively downregulate inflammation and participate in the defence against respiratory infections. Another complicating factor is the notorious mast cell heterogeneity, where each anatomical compartment of the lung harbours site-specific mast cell populations. Alveolar mast cells stand out as they lack the cardinal expression of the high affinity IgE receptor. Supporting the emerging concept of alveolar inflammation in asthma, alveolar mast cells shift to a highly FcϵRI-expressing phenotype in uncontrolled asthma. Site-specific and disease-associated mast cell changes have also recently been described in most other inflammatory conditions of the lung. Thus, in the exploration of new anti-mast cell treatment strategies the search has widened to include the lung periphery and the delicate task of identifying which of the countless potential roles are the critical disease modifying ones in a given clinical situation.}},
  author       = {{Erjefält, Jonas}},
  issn         = {{1600-0617}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{133}},
  pages        = {{299--307}},
  publisher    = {{European Respiratory Society}},
  series       = {{European Respiratory Review}},
  title        = {{Mast cells in human airways: the culprit?}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/3154162/5336833}},
  doi          = {{10.1183/09059180.00005014}},
  volume       = {{23}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}