Abstract: | 1. The mast-cell distribution in the various layers of the ileum has been described.2. Histamine-content, anaphylactic histamine-release and the anaphylactic dose-response curve of the full-thickness ileum and of the longitudinal muscle strip have been measured and compared.3. Tetrodotoxin 10-7 g/ml had no obvious effect on the anaphylactic dose-response curve of either preparation. This suggests that the plexus is not of any great importance in the Schultz-Dale reaction.4. Exposure of the longitudinal muscle strip to octylamine 10-3 g/ml for 1 min reduced the mast cell content by 95-100%. After this treatment the dose-response curve to antigen was eliminated, although the muscle still responded to small doses of histamine and to anaphylactic mediators. Pretreatment of antibody with octylamine did not impair passive sensitization and subsequent response to antigenic challenge. This suggests that the classical Schultz-Dale reaction in the strip is mediated mainly by mast cells, and possibly other cells, and is probably not due to a direct effect of the antigen-antibody reaction on the smooth muscle.5. The typical three-phase anaphylactic response (quick contraction, quick relaxation, slow contraction) of full-thickness ileum is discussed and compared with the predominantly two-phase response of the longitudinal muscle strip. No evidence was found for the release of a relaxation-factor. It is suggested that the initial fast phase may be due to mediators released from mast cells among the longitudinal muscle fibres, and the sustained contraction to a second wave of mediators reaching the longitudinal muscle from deeper layers of the ileum. |