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Int Arch Allergy Appl Immunol. 1989;88(1-2):197-9.
Effect of histamine on chemotaxis and phagocytosis of human alveolar macrophages and blood monocytes.

Radermecker M, Bury T, Saint-Remy P.

Division of Respiratory Medicine, CHU Sart-Tilman, State University of Liege, Belgium.

We studied in vitro the effect of histamine on the chemotactic and phagocytic abilities of human blood monocytes and alveolar macrophages. The chemotactic response to activated autologous serum, leukotriene B4 or N-formyl-methionine-L-phenylalanine was similar for macrophages and monocytes. Incubation of monocytes with histamine in picomolar concentrations caused a significant chemotactic inhibition (about 25%). This effect was antagonized by cimetidine but not by promethazine. Histamine did not have an effect on alveolar macrophages chemotaxis or phagocytosis. Thus, histamine, in minute concentrations, exerts, in vitro, a partial inhibitory effect on monocyte chemotaxis through activation of H2-type receptors.

online pharmacy ref source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=2707883&dopt=Abstract




Int Arch Allergy Appl Immunol. 1981;65(2):144-52.
Depression of neutrophil chemotaxis in atopic individuals. An H2 histamine receptor response.

Radermecker M, Maldague MP.

Neutrophil chemotaxis was compared in normal and atopic individuals using a modified Boyden chamber with as chemotactant, autologous serum either unactivated or activated by zymosan or an endotoxin-containing house dust preparation. A high incidence of defective leukotaxis was found in atopics when cells were opposed to activated serum. The cause of this abnormality is not intrinsic to the leukocytes since random migration and chemotaxis towards unactivated serum were comparable in normal and atopic subjects. The defect persisted when atopic leukocytes were opposed to activated normal serum and the chemotactic response of normal neutrophils was not imparied when tested against activated atopic serum. Leukotaxis was significantly depressed by incubating atopic leukocytes with allergen to which they were sensitized, suggesting an inhibitory effect of mediators of anaphylaxis. Histamine inhibited in vitro neutrophil chemotaxis in normal and atopic subjects. This inhibition was dose-related and significantly more pronounced in atopics. Incubation of atopic leukocytes with an H2 antagonist, cimetidine, was capable of enhancing their chemotactic responsiveness towards activated autologous serum to levels observed in normal controls. In the same conditions, an H1 blocker, promethazine, was without effect. These data indicate that the leukotactic dysfunction of atopic individuals results from an abnormal sensitivity of these leukocytes to histamine which, in the chemotactic chamber, may be released from basophils by products of complement activation and, in some experimental conditions, by antigen to which cells are sensitized.

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Neuroscience. 1985 Oct;16(2):307-22.
Evidence for excitatory actions of histamine on supraoptic neurons in vitro: mediation by an H1-type receptor.

Armstrong WE, Sladek CD.

The effects of histamine on the firing of supraoptic neurosecretory neurons in the rat were examined in vitro using acutely prepared, hypothalamo-neurohypophysial explants perifused with an artificial cerebrospinal fluid. Extracellular action potentials meeting the criteria of antidromic invasion from neurohypophysial stalk stimulation were recorded from 135 neurons in the tuberal portion of the supraoptic nucleus, which lies superficially along the tuber cinereum and consists of mostly vasopressin-containing neurons. Units could be classified as slow/silent (76.3%), phasic (21.5%) or continuous (2.2%) on the basis of their spontaneous activity. Histamine applied briefly to the perifusate excited approximately one-third of the slow silent neurons and approximately two-thirds of the phasic neurons, with a wide range (10(-3)-10(-9)) in the effective concentration across neurons. The H1-receptor agonists 2-pyridylethylamine and 2-thiazolylethylamine mimicked these excitations in 10 of 12 and 3 of 6 neurons tested, respectively. The H2-receptor agonists dimaprit (4 neurons) and impromidine (5 neurons) failed to excite any of the tested neurons previously excited by histamine. The H1-receptor antagonist promethazine antagonized histamine's excitatory effect in 8 of 9 cells, while the H2-receptor antagonist cimetidine had little effect on the 9 cells tested. Histamine also modified bursts of activity induced in some slow/silent neurons by antidromic stimulation without having an observable effect in the absence of an antidromic burst. In 10 of 18 neurons histamine produced an elongation of burst duration and a modest increase in intraburst firing rate when applied during an antidromically evoked burst. In an additional 5 of 17 neurons, which had neither previously responded to histamine nor shown an antidromically-evoked burst, the pairing of histamine application and antidromic shocks resulted in an antidromically evoked burst. The effects of histamine on evoked bursts also appeared to be mediated by an H1-receptor. Histamine's excitation of supraoptic neurons is thus dependent on the electrical activity expressed by the neuron at the time of testing. Conductances activated by depolarization of the neuron may be modified by histamine or this compound may alter the threshold for burst generation. Considered with data showing H1-receptor localization and histamine-immunoreactive fibers within the supraoptic nucleus, the present results, as well as those showing the potency of centrally applied histamine in releasing vasopressin, suggest histamine may act physiologically by altering the electrical activity of vasopressin-secreting neurons.

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