Abstract

Phagocytosis in macrophages is often studied using inert polymer microspheres. An implicit assumption in these studies is that such particles contain little or no specific information in their structure that affects their intracellular fate. We tested that assumption by examining macrophage phagosomes containing different kinds of particles and found that although all particles progressed directly to lysosomes, their subsequent fates varied. Within 15 min of phagocytosis, >90% of phagosomes containing opsonized sheep erythrocytes, poly-e-caprolactone microspheres, polystyrene microspheres (PS), or polyethylene glycol-conjugated PS merged with the lysosomal compartment. After that point, however, the characteristics of phagolysosomes changed in several ways that indicated differing degrees of continued interaction with the lysosomal compartment. Sheep erythrocyte phagolysosomes merged together and degraded their contents quickly, poly-e-caprolactone phagolysosomes showed intermediate levels of interaction, and PS phagolysosomes became isolated within the cytoplasm. PS were relatively inaccessible to an endocytic tracer, Texas red dextran, added after phagocytosis. Moreover, immunofluorescent staining for the lysosomal protease cathepsin L decreased in PS phagolysosomes to 23% by 4 h after phagocytosis, indicating degradation of the enzyme without replacement. Finally, PS surface labeled with fluorescein-labeled albumin showed a markedly reduced rate of protein degradation in phagolysosomes, when compared to rates measured for proteins in or on other particles. Thus, particle chemistry affected both the degree of postlysosomal interactions with other organelles and, consequently, the intracellular half-life of particle-associated proteins. Such properties may affect the ability of particles to deliver macromolecules into the major histocompatibility complex class I and II antigen presentation pathways.

Highlights

  • Phagocytosis in macrophages is often studied using inert polymer microspheres

  • The phagolysosome is generally considered the end point of the phagocytic pathway

  • These included Sheep erythrocytes (SE), biodegradable poly-e-caprolactone microspheres (PCL) (Pitt, 1990), or nonbiodegradable polystyrene microspheres (PS). Resolution of these kinetics was enhanced by a method that identified only those particles internalized within a 2-min period (Figs. 1 and 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Phagocytosis in macrophages is often studied using inert polymer microspheres. An implicit assumption in these studies is that such particles contain little or no specific information in their structure that affects their intracellular fate. F-BSA, fluorescein-conjugated BSA; FDx, fluorescein dextran; LAMP, lysosome-associated membrane progosomes containing latex beads acquire markers of late endocytic organeUes and lose markers of early endocytic organelles (Rab 5) during their transformation to phagolysosomes. These studies indicate that the phagosome may undergo multiple interactions with other endocytic compartments before meeting the lysosome. The phagolysosome is generally considered the end point of the phagocytic pathway

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