MACROPHAGE FUNCTION AND THE CYTOSKELETAL SYSTEM: INHIBITION OF PHAGOCYTIC UPTAKE BY THE CYTOSKELETAL DISRUPTIVE TERTIARY AMINE LOCAL ANESTHETICS
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Hood College Biology
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Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
The macrophage participates in immunological phenomena which must be
mediated through its cell periphery. Of these phenomena, the ability of
the macrophage to actively phagocytise opsonized particles long has been
familiar to students of inflammation and immune reactions. The phagocytic
response of the macrophage to opsonized particles is initiated only after
recognition between the macrophage membrane and the opsonized particle is
established. The mechanism by which recognition at the cell surface is
translated into the phagocytic response by the macrophage remains to be
elucidated. Observations at the subcellular level have implicated the
cytoskeletal system, an orderly array of subplasmalemmal microfilaments and
microtubules, as a participant in the phagocytic response of macrophages.
Recent observations on the pharmacologic ability of tertiary amine
local anesthetics to disrupt the cytoskeletal system of various cell types
resulting in cell surface rearrangement (Poste et al., 1975; Poste,
Papahadjopoulos and Nicolson, 1975), has provided means by which to obtain
data on the coordinated function of microfilaments and microtubules in
phagocytising macrophages.
