An intense and reproducible peroxidase staining in the cutaneous mast cells of two patients with systemic mast cell disease and urticaria pigmentosa is demonstrated at the ultrastructural level. This enzyme activity was demonstrated by use of a cytochemical technique employing 3,3'- diaminobenzicine (DAB) as an oxidizable substrate, after fixation by a tannic acid-aldehyde mixture. Enzyme activity was localized in the perinuclear cisterna and strands of endoplasmic reticulum. Granules appeared unreactive. This peroxidase activity appears sensitive to fixation by aldehydes; it is inhibited by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole (AMT) and by lack of H2O2 or DAB in the incubation medium. These characteristics are fundamentally different from the peroxidase activity of basophils, and the demonstration of this enzyme is therefore not a further argument for a common ontogenetic origin of both cells. On the other hand, the cytochemical characteristics of this enzyme are very similar to those of platelet peroxidase (P-PO), which has been connected to the synthesis by platelets of prostaglandins. Since the mast cell is known to generate prostaglandins, the relationship between the enzyme described and prostaglandin synthesis by mast cells is discussed.
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