Update on Eosinophil Interaction with Mast Cells: The Allergic Effector Unit

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Abstract

Mast cells and eosinophils are the key effector cells of allergy [1]. In general, allergic reactions are composed of two phases, namely an early phase and a late phase, and after that resolution occurs. If the allergic reactions fail to resolve after the late phase, allergic inflammation (AI) can evolve into a chronic phase mainly involving mast cells and eosinophils that abundantly coexist in the inflamed tissue in the late and chronic phases and cross-talk in a bidirectional manner. We defined these bidirectional interactions between MCs and Eos, as the “allergic effector unit.” This cross talk is mediated by both physical cell-cell contacts through cell surface receptors such as CD48, 2B4, and respective ligands and through released mediators such as various specific granular mediators, arachidonic acid metabolites, cytokines, and chemokines [2, 3]. The allergic effector unit can be studied in vitro in a customized co-culture system using mast cells and eosinophils derived from either mouse or human sources.

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Gangwar, R. S., Pahima, H., Puzzovio, P. G., & Levi-Schaffer, F. (2021). Update on Eosinophil Interaction with Mast Cells: The Allergic Effector Unit. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 2241, pp. 221–242). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-1095-4_18

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