McNeil Benjamin D, Pundir Priyanka, Meeker Sonya, Han Liang, Undem Bradley J, Kulka Marianna, Dong Xinzhong
The Solomon H. Snyder Department of Neuroscience, Department of Neurosurgery, Center for Sensory Biology, Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2E1, Canada.
Nature. 2015 Mar 12;519(7542):237-41. doi: 10.1038/nature14022. Epub 2014 Dec 17.
Mast cells are primary effectors in allergic reactions, and may have important roles in disease by secreting histamine and various inflammatory and immunomodulatory substances. Although they are classically activated by immunoglobulin (Ig)E antibodies, a unique property of mast cells is their antibody-independent responsiveness to a range of cationic substances, collectively called basic secretagogues, including inflammatory peptides and drugs associated with allergic-type reactions. The pathogenic roles of these substances have prompted a decades-long search for their receptor(s). Here we report that basic secretagogues activate mouse mast cells in vitro and in vivo through a single receptor, Mrgprb2, the orthologue of the human G-protein-coupled receptor MRGPRX2. Secretagogue-induced histamine release, inflammation and airway contraction are abolished in Mrgprb2-null mutant mice. Furthermore, we show that most classes of US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved peptidergic drugs associated with allergic-type injection-site reactions also activate Mrgprb2 and MRGPRX2, and that injection-site inflammation is absent in mutant mice. Finally, we determine that Mrgprb2 and MRGPRX2 are targets of many small-molecule drugs associated with systemic pseudo-allergic, or anaphylactoid, reactions; we show that drug-induced symptoms of anaphylactoid responses are significantly reduced in knockout mice; and we identify a common chemical motif in several of these molecules that may help predict side effects of other compounds. These discoveries introduce a mouse model to study mast cell activation by basic secretagogues and identify MRGPRX2 as a potential therapeutic target to reduce a subset of drug-induced adverse effects.
肥大细胞是过敏反应的主要效应细胞,通过分泌组胺以及多种炎症和免疫调节物质,可能在疾病中发挥重要作用。尽管它们传统上由免疫球蛋白(Ig)E抗体激活,但肥大细胞的一个独特特性是它们对一系列阳离子物质具有不依赖抗体的反应性,这些阳离子物质统称为碱性促分泌剂,包括炎症肽和与过敏样反应相关的药物。这些物质的致病作用促使人们对其受体进行了长达数十年的研究。在此,我们报告碱性促分泌剂通过单一受体Mrgprb2在体外和体内激活小鼠肥大细胞,Mrgprb2是人类G蛋白偶联受体MRGPRX2的同源物。在Mrgprb2基因敲除突变小鼠中,促分泌剂诱导的组胺释放、炎症和气道收缩均被消除。此外,我们表明,美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准的大多数与过敏样注射部位反应相关的肽能药物也能激活Mrgprb2和MRGPRX2,并且突变小鼠不存在注射部位炎症。最后,我们确定Mrgprb2和MRGPRX2是许多与全身性假过敏或类过敏反应相关的小分子药物的靶点;我们表明,基因敲除小鼠中药物诱导的类过敏反应症状显著减轻;并且我们在其中几种分子中鉴定出一个共同的化学基序,这可能有助于预测其他化合物的副作用。这些发现引入了一种小鼠模型来研究碱性促分泌剂对肥大细胞的激活作用,并确定MRGPRX2作为减少一部分药物诱导不良反应的潜在治疗靶点。