Mast cells, components of the immune system, are responsible    for alleriges and asthma, conditions that debilitate millions.    Yet relatively few scientists study them.  
    Hydar Ali of the University of    Pennsylvania is a member of the select group of researchers    for whom mast cells are a focus. A professor in the     Department of Pathology and director of faculty advancement    and diversity in Penns School of Dental Medicine,    Ali has spent his career discerning the cells unique qualities    and honing in on strategies to modulate their activity to    improve health.  
    Obviously Im biased, but I do think that our findings are    critically important, Ali said. These cells are relatively    poorly understood, and yet weve been able to identify some of    the most sought-after molecular targets to affect diseases like    allergies and asthma that have the potential to kill.  
    Mast cells are part of the immune system and reside in tissues    rather than in the blood stream. They are important for    protecting the body from pathogens and contribute to wound    healing but are most notorious for their involvement in    inflammatory and allergic conditions. They are rich in    histamine which is released when mast cells are activated and    can lead to the quintessential signs of an allergic reaction:    hives, itching and even anaphylaxis.  
    No living human has ever been shown to lack mast cells, and    mutant mice that lack them are unable to fight microbial    infection, said Ali, so its pretty clear that mast cells are    there to protect us from infection. But the other side of the    coin is that people who have too many mast cells can develop    skin rashes, itch, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal    pain.  
    Because mast cells are present only in low numbers and cannot    be extracted from the tissue, they are considered difficult to    work with, and thus the pool of researchers who do so is    limited.  
    Despite these hurdles, Ali started working with mast cells    while pursuing his doctorate at University College London. His    dissertation examined the diversity of mast cell types.  
    I looked at mast cells from different tissues and found    tremendous heterogeneity, he said. So, for example, if you    took a mast cell from the gut, that cell is different from one    in the skin. Theres also variability when you go to different    species, so there are major differences between mouse mast    cells, rat mast cells and human mast cells.  
    These differences make translational work, moving from animal    models to human treatments, a challenge, as Ali and many of his    colleauges in the field have discovered.  
    After earning his Ph.D., Ali moved into a postdoctoral position    at the National Institutes of    Health, where a handful of labs focused on mast cells. He    recalls headline-making news when scientists in a neighboring    lab cloned the gene for the IgE receptor. This receptor binds    IgE antibodies and triggers a signaling pathway associated with    allergic diseases, eczema and other condtions.  
    I remember The New York Times said that a therapy for    asthma was on the way, Ali said. You read so many things like    this and they never come, but this was different.  
    Indeed, by the 2000s an asthma drug came on the market to    target this receptor  
    Ali saw that the field was ripe for discovery.    Wanting to continue his rearch in academica, he took a position    at Duke University, working    with Ralph    Snyderman, who was then chancellor of health affairs.    Snydermans research portfolio primarily examined white blood    cells other than mast cells, notably neutrophils and    macrophages, but Ali helped discover that mast cells could be    used as a model system to study properties of neutrophil    receptors in a different context.  
    In 1998, Ali was ready to run his own lab. He had had the good    fortune of being awarded grants, from the NIH, American Lung Association and    American Heart    Association, all to study G protein coupled receptors,    which, like IgE receptors, are present in large numbers on mast    cells.  
    At Duke, he had discovered that one of these G-protein coupled    receptors, or GPCRs, was activated by a protein called C3a,    part of the complement pathway that can often promote    inflammation. High levels of C3a was also known to be    associated with an increased risk of asthma in humans.  
    After coming to Penn, Ali serendipitously discovered the    presence of a     new GPCR, known as MRGPRX2, which is found only on mast    cells and not other immune cells.  
    Pursuing this finding led Ali and colleagues to find that small    proteins called antimicrobial peptides, which were believed to    only kill microbes directly, could activate mast cells through    MRGPRX2 to harness the protective function of mast cells to    help clear the invading microbes.  
    Working with Penn Dentals     Henry Daniell, a professor in the     Department of Biochemistry,Ali showed that a    couple of these antimicrobial peptides, manufactured through    Daniells patented biopharmaceutical plant-production platform,    were able to activate the mast cells through MRGPRX2,    showcasing the positive role of mast cells in defending the    body against pathogens.  
    I think this highlights the fact that mast cells are playing a    role in host defense, said Ali.  
    On the other side of this fine line, mast cells involvement in    pathogenic conditions such as asthma, Alis lab has been at the    forefront in discoveries with the potential to translate to    human therapies.  
    Earlier researchers had found that a key receptor involved in    chronic asthma and anaphylaxis in mice did not function the    same way in humans. Thus much energy that was poured into    developing inhibitors of that receptor in mice ended up being    fruitless in the pursuit of human therapies.  
    Yet, Ali and colleagues showed that, in humans, similar effects    were elicited by signaling through MRGPRX2. While they had also    shown that activating this receptor led to improved    antimicrobial effects, in the context of allergic response,    blocking this receptor could inhibit the harmful inflammatory    effects.  
    Its two sides of the same coin, Ali said.  
    With a new set of grants, Alis lab is working with the    Fox Chase Chemical Diversity    Center to screen for small molecules that mimic known    antimicrobial peptides in activating mast cells through the    MRGPRX2 and operate with a similar dual function, direct    killing and activating mast cells to help in fending off the    attack. Theyre also looking for potential drugs that block    this receptors activity to reduce the effects of allergic and    chronic inflammatory conditions.  
    In addition, theyre using mouse models that use human version    of molecular receptors to continue unraveling the mysteries of    mast cells. One project is looking at the association between    MRGPRX2 actviation and worsening asthma, while another is    looking at the connection between chronic heart and lung    diseases and genetic variations in mast cell receptors.  
    The goal is keeping the work relevant to humans.  
    With animal models, Ali said, if you think a gene is    important, you knock it out, you over express it, you generate    a ton of data and can publish it in a very high-impact journal.    And when you submit a grant, it looks like youre a very    productive investigator, you have impressive results in mice.    But the question is, does it relate to humans?  
    In May, Ali will present his recent findings on the mysteries    of controlling mast cells through MRGPRX2 in a keynote lecture    at the European Mast Cell    and Basophil Research Network International Meeting in    Prague.  
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Penn Dental Medicine Professor Unlocks the Mysteries of Mast Cells - Penn: Office of University Communications