Mast cell disappearance in chronic murine graft-vs-host-disease (GVHD)-ultrastructural demonstration of phantom mast cells

1986 
Mast cells were studied during the induction of chronic graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) induced in mice across minor histocompatibility barriers. B10.D2 spleen cells (or control BALB/c cells) were injected into irradiated (600 rad) BALB/c recipients. Serial skin biopsies were taken over 26 days, during which time changes occurred resembling scleroderma, namely, dermal fibrosis, a mononuclear cell infiltrate, and loss of fat and appendages. Mast cells, when stained with toluidine blue, "disappeared" from GVHD, but not from control skin. Ultrastructural analysis showed that mast cells in GVHD skin were indeed present but underwent degranulation. Some mast cells showed only pale expanded sacs, indicating granule depletion. Because these cells could not be seen by toluidine blue staining but were plainly present, we have called them "phantom mast cells." Cellular activation occurred in many GVHD mast cells as shown by increased cytoplasmic activity, with numerous Golgi complexes, ribosomes, granular endoplasmic reticulum, and small vesicles. No identifiable mast cells were seen after day 19. No significant changes were seen in the mast cells of syngeneic control mice. We believe that immunologic processes in chronic GVHD cause a slow release of mast cell granule contents, which is different from anaphylactic degranulation. The depleted mast cells (invisible by toluidine blue staining) are also activated, perhaps in an attempt to replete their stores of granule contents. We discuss the relation of mast cell changes to fibrosis.
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