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Decreased phagocytosis by peritoneal macrophages from BCG-treated mice: induction of the phagocytic defect in normal macrophages with BCG in vitro.
Authors:C F Nathan  W D Terry
Affiliation:Immunology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20014 U.S.A.
Abstract:Mice treated up to 31 weeks previously with intraperitoneal BCG yielded peritoneal macrophages with decreased phagocytosis of starch granules, latex beads, graphite dust and formalinized Listeria monocytogenes, with or without opsonin, compared to macrophages from untreated mice. These assays were selected to allow quantitative determinations of the rate or extent of particle uptake under nonrate-limiting conditions. Phagocytosis could be depressed to a similar degree by the prior addition of either starch granules or BCG to normal adherent peritoneal cell cultures in vitro. However, with these two particles, two different mechanisms of inhibition of subsequent phagocytosis appeared to be at work. Inhibition of phagocytosis by prior exposure to large amounts of starch granules appeared to consist largely of mechanical interference, as if through the preemption of intracellular space. In contrast, inhibition by prior uptake of BCG occurred with very small amounts of BCG and appeared gradually with time after uptake of BCG. The ability of a “macrophage activating agent” to inhibit selected functions of parasitized cells may help to explain some of the discordant results obtained by others studying phagocytosis by “activated” macrophages. Such agents may simultaneously enhance some macrophage functions and depress others.
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