Abstract

Non-professional phagocytosis by cancer cells has been described for decades. Recently, non-professional phagocytosis by normal tissue cells has been reported, which prompted us to take a closer look at this phenomenon. Non-professional phagocytosis was studied by staining cultured cells with live-cell staining dyes or by staining paraffin-embedded tissues by immunohistochemistry. Here, we report that each of 21 normal tissue cell lines from seven different organs was capable of phagocytosis, including ex vivo cell cultures examined before the 3rd passage as well as the primary and virus-transformed cell lines. We extended our analysis to an in vivo setting, and we found the occurrence of non-professional phagocytosis in healthy skin biopsies immediately after resection. Using dystrophin immunohistochemistry for membrane staining, human post-infarction myocardial tissue was assessed. We found prominent signs of non-professional phagocytosis at the transition zone of healthy and infarcted myocardia. Taken together, our findings suggest that non-professional phagocytosis is a general feature of normal tissue cells.

Highlights

  • Non-professional phagocytosis by cancer cells has been described for decades

  • Efferocytosis is linked to professional phagocytes such as macrophages[7,8,9,10], while additional non-professional phagocytic cells may act as phagocytes

  • We studied the occurrence of non-professional phagocytosis in 21 different normal tissue cell lines, including skin tissue and myocardial infarction specimens

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Summary

Introduction

Non-professional phagocytosis by cancer cells has been described for decades. Recently, nonprofessional phagocytosis by normal tissue cells has been reported, which prompted us to take a closer look at this phenomenon. Non-professional phagocytosis was studied by staining cultured cells with live-cell staining dyes or by staining paraffin-embedded tissues by immunohistochemistry. Our findings suggest that non-professional phagocytosis is a general feature of normal tissue cells. Cancer cells have been studied regarding their ability to engulf other cancer cells. We recently showed that necrotic or necroptotic cancer cells are engulfed by homotypic or heterotypic live cells[4]. Non-professional phagocytosis was observed in normal tissues by smooth muscle cells, renal cells and hepatocytes[11,12,13,14]. We studied the occurrence of non-professional phagocytosis in 21 different normal tissue cell lines, including skin tissue and myocardial infarction specimens

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