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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Cell Motility and the Cytoskeleton 15 (1990), S. 260-270 
    ISSN: 0886-1544
    Keywords: Fc-receptors ; antibodies ; “frustrated” phagocytosis ; leucocytes ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: When phagocytes spread on surfaces coated with ligands such as IgG, they form a tight seal with the substrate. This seal excludes soluble macromolecules in the medium from the interface between the cell and substrate. In contrast, when cells spread on control surfaces that are not coated with ligands, the underside of the cell remains freely accessible to soluble proteins (Wright and Silverstein: Nature 309:359, 1984). We employed reflection-interference microscopy (RIM) to determine where the seal forms during interaction with ligand (IgG) -coated surfaces. Human monocyte-derived macrophages (MO) were plated at 37°C on dinitrophenylated (DNP)-glass coverslips (control substrate), IgM anti-DNP-DNP-coated glass (control substrate), or on IgG anti-DNP-DNP-coated glass (phagocytosis-promoting substrate). Live or fixed cells were examined by RIM. Spreading on control surfaces at 37°C was complete in 25 minutes, whereas spreading on IgG-coated surfaces was maximal within 15 minutes and resulted in cell-substrate contact area 1.6 × that of control cells. Within 1 h at 37°C, 90% of MO that spread on IgG-coated substrates, but not on control substrates, excluded macromolecules from their underside. A minor population of cells (19%) exhibited a uniform iron gray RIM appearance indicating an even, close approach to the substrate. These cells may represent early stages of frustrated phagocytosis. In contrast to cells on control substrates, 70% of cells on IgG-coated substrates developed continuous peripheral dark rings in RIM indicative of close association with the substrate. Essentially all cells with peripheral dark rings in RIM excluded macromolecules from their underside. Enclosed within this ring was an area of greater separation between the cell membrane and the substrate, as indicated by the lighter grey of this region in RIM and by the accessibility of substrate to anti-substrate antibody when breaks in the dark ring occur. Thus, MO can create a closed compartment between plasma membrane and substrate that excludes proteins in the surrounding medium, thereby protecting substances secreted into this space from potentially inhibitory substances in the medium.
    Additional Material: 6 Ill.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: We have substituted choline chloride, tetramethylammonium chloride, sucrose, or glucose for culture medium sodium chloride. When culture medium sodium is reduced below physiological levels (143 mM) by replacement of graded concentrations of sodium chloride with equivalent concentrations of choline chloride, normal fibroblasts approach proliferative inactivity in the presence of 90 mM Na, while their Rous sarcoma virus (RSV)-infected counterparts proliferate actively; both normal and neoplastic cells die with further sodium reduction. When culture medium NaCl is replaced with tetramethylammonium chloride, however, both normal and RSV-infected fibroblasts alike approach proliferative inactivity in the presence of 110 mM Na and both die off in the presence of 90 mM Na. When culture medium NaCl is replaced with sucrose or glucose yet another set of resuls is obtained: both normal and RSV-infected fibroblasts proliferate at reduced, although significant, rates in the presence of 42 mM Na. It is clear from our experimental results that the effects of reduction of culture medium sodium on cell proliferation differ markedly with the use of different sodium chloride substitutes. Caution must be exercised, therefore, in drawing inferences concerning the role of sodium in mitogenesis from experimental studies based on the tactic of reduction of external sodium.
    Additional Material: 6 Ill.
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