Abstract

The non-phosphorylating organophosphorus compound triisopropyl phosphate, which is known to inhibit rabbit leucocyte locomotion, can stimulate the locomotion of guinea pig leucocytes under certain conditions. Different methods of preparing guinea pig leucocyte monolayers can give preparations with different proportions of motile cells. With preparations that contain relatively slowly moving cells triisopropyl phosphate increases the number of stationary cells without significantly affecting the speed of the cells that remain motile. Most rabbit leucocytes labelled with fluorescein-labelled concanavalin A form caps within 5–10 min at 37 °C. In contrast the rate of cap formation in guinea pig leucocytes is much slower and after 20 min many cells have only random patches. Triisopropyl phosphate accelerates cap formation in guinea pig leucocytes but not in rabbit leucocytes. The local anaesthetic nupercaine inhibits cap and patch formation in rabbit and guinea pig leucocytes. Inhibition of rabbit leucocyte locomotion is induced by concanavalin A at 1 μg/ml. These results are briefly related to the known effects of triisopropyl phosphate on the isolated leucocyte plasma membrane.

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