enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Phagocytosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phagocytosis

    Phagocytosis (from Ancient Greek φαγεῖν (phagein) 'to eat' and κύτος (kytos) 'cell') is the process by which a cell uses its plasma membrane to engulf a large particle (≥ 0.5 μm), giving rise to an internal compartment called the phagosome. It is one type of endocytosis. A cell that performs phagocytosis is called a phagocyte.

  3. Category:Phagocytes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Phagocytes

    Phagocytosis; T. T helper cell; V. Vomocytosis This page was last edited on 29 August 2020, at 19:46 (UTC). Text is available under the ... Contact Wikipedia; Code of ...

  4. History of phagocytosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_phagocytosis

    The first demonstration of phagocytosis as a property of leukocytes, the immune cells, was from the German zoologist Ernst Haeckel. [14] [15] In 1846, English physician Thomas Wharton Jones had discovered that a group of leucocytes, which he called "granule-cell" (later renamed and identified as eosinophil [16]), could change shape, the phenomenon later called amoeboid movement.

  5. Phagocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phagocyte

    Unbound phagocyte surface receptors do not trigger phagocytosis. 2. Binding of receptors causes them to cluster. 3. Phagocytosis is triggered and the particle is taken up by the phagocyte. Phagocytosis is the process of taking in particles such as bacteria, invasive fungi, parasites, dead host cells, and cellular and foreign debris by a cell. [22]

  6. Kupffer cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kupffer_cell

    It is possible for the Kupffer cells to take in large particles by phagocytosis and smaller particles via pinocytosis. [4] Kupffer cells are integral in the innate responses of the immune system. They are important for host defense and play a role in the metabolism of many different compounds including, lipids, protein complexes and small ...

  7. Macrophage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrophage

    Due to their role in phagocytosis, macrophages are involved in many diseases of the immune system. For example, they participate in the formation of granulomas, inflammatory lesions that may be caused by a large number of diseases. Some disorders, mostly rare, of ineffective phagocytosis and macrophage function have been described, for example ...

  8. Monocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monocyte

    Phagocytosis is the process of uptake of microbes and particles followed by digestion and destruction of this material. Monocytes can perform phagocytosis using intermediary ( opsonising ) proteins such as antibodies or complement that coat the pathogen, as well as by binding to the microbe directly via pattern recognition receptors that ...

  9. Phagolysosome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phagolysosome

    The process of phagocytosis showing phagolysosome formation. Lysosome(shown in green) fuses with phagosome to form a phagolysosome. Membrane fusion of the phagosome and lysosome is regulated by the Rab5 protein, [1] a G protein that allows the exchange of material between these two organelles but prevents complete fusion of their membranes. [1]