Histamine effects on conjunctival fibroblasts from patients with vernal conjunctivitis.

Exp Eye Res

Department of Ophthalmology, Institute of Physiopathological Optics, University of Padova, Italy.

Published: June 1999

Histamine, an important mast cell mediator in allergic disorders, may affect extracellular matrix production and cell growth in vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC). In the present study, the histamine reactivity of conjunctival fibroblasts derived from VKC patients was investigated in vitro. Conjunctival fibroblast cultures were derived from biopses of 8 tarsal VKC patients and 5 normal subjects. These cells were maintained in vitro and stimulated with different concentrations of histamine with and without H1 (clorpheniramine) and H2 (cimetidine) receptor antagonists. Comparisons were made to fibroblasts grown in the same media without histamine and to fibroblasts stimulated with just antihistamine. The effects of histamine were evaluated by: (1) the MTT test to assess cell proliferation; (2) an in vitro wound model for cell migration and (3) the measurement of procollagen I (PIP) and procollagen III (PIIIP) in supernatants for collagen production. Results showed: (1) While VKC-derived fibroblasts proliferated at a faster rate than normal cells in unstimulated media, after histamine stimulation, VKC and normal cells grew at a similar rate. Both H1 and H2 antagonists significantly inhibited (P<0.05) histamine-induced cell proliferation. (2) Histamine enhanced cell migration after wounding; this effect was inhibited only by H2 antagonism. (3) When stimulated with histamine, VKC fibroblasts produced significantly more PIP than those in control media. Furthermore, VKC-derived fibroblasts were more sensitive to histamine challenge, producing significantly more PIP than normal fibroblasts. H1 and H2 antagonists did not modify histamine-stimulated PIP production. The enhanced proliferative and productive capacity of VKC fibroblasts may be the result of a selective overgrowth of one or more fibroblast subpopulations in a chronically inflamed tissue. Histamine increased proliferation, migration and collagen production in both normal and VKC fibroblasts. Since H2 antagonism modulated both cell growth and migration, but not histamine-induced collagen production, the latter may be mediated by a different receptor. These results showed that histamine is at least partially responsible for fibroblast stimulation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/exer.1999.0658DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

conjunctival fibroblasts
8
vkc patients
8
media histamine
8
normal cells
8
histamine
7
fibroblasts
5
histamine effects
4
effects conjunctival
4
fibroblasts patients
4
patients vernal
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!