Abstract

The endocytosis of latex particles (0.33, 0.46 and 0.80 μm in diameter) in the sinusoidal endothelial and Kupffer cells of the rat liver was studied electron microscopically. When the liver was perfused with serum-free oxygenated Krebs Ringer bicarbonate, latex particles of all three sizes were taken up by the endothelial cells. After a 10-min perfusion, particles were incorporated by the luminal cell surface of the perikarya or of the thick portion of the endothelial cells. A large patch of bristle coat was surrounding the ingested particle. The number of ingested particles in the endothelial cells, however, was much less than in the Kupffer cells. In in vivo experiments, no endocytosis of the latex particles was observed in the endothelial cells. In the Kupffer cells, particles were engulfed by the ruffled membranes or sank into the cytoplasm without a large patch of the bristle coat both in the perfusion system and in vivo. These observations show that at least 0.80 μm latex particles are taken up by the bristle-coated membranes in the sinusoidal endothelial cells of the perfused liver. The endocytic mechanism for latex particles in the endothelial cells is different from that of the Kupffer cells.

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