GOSSELIN R E
J Gen Physiol. 1956 May 20;39(5):625-49. doi: 10.1085/jgp.39.5.625.
Macrophages isolated from the rabbit peritoneal cavity extract radioactive colloidal gold from solutions in vitro. This reaction (ultraphagocytosis) involves two phases: the reversible adsorption of gold on the cell surface and the subsequent irreversible removal of surface-bound colloid into the cell. The latter process (called ingestion) appears to proceed at a rate which is proportional at any moment to the amount of gold attached to the cell surface; the latter in turn can be related to the concentration in extracellular fluid by a simple adsorption isotherm. In terms of rate, therefore, ingestion is related to the extracellular gold concentration in the same way that many enzyme reactions are related to the substrate concentration. Although enzyme kinetics are useful in describing rates of ultraphagocytosis, there is no evidence that enzymes participate in either adsorption or ingestion or that metabolic energy is required of the macrophage. Exudative leucocytes of the heterophilic series show little or no interaction with these finely dispersed gold sols (mean particle diameter 6 to 9 millimicrons). 37 degrees C. three parameters are sufficient to characterize the reaction between gold and a suspension of macrophages, namely an affinity constant (1/K(s)), an adsorption maximum (L), and a rate constant of ingestion (k(3)). Although numerical values differed markedly among cells of different exudates, all three parameters were estimated in three instances. In these suspensions between 2 and 20 per cent of the surface-bound gold was ingested each minute (37 degrees C., pH 7.4). Under conditions of surface saturation, it was estimated that tens of thousands of gold particles were attached to the surface of an average macrophage; this amount of colloid, however, occupied less than 1 per cent of the geometric area of the cell surface. Although surface saturation imposed an upper limit on the rate of ingestion, no practical limit was noted in the capacity of macrophages to continue the reaction. Optical measurements imply that within the cell agglutination of colloidal gold began promptly after its ingestion. These data are compared with published kinetic studies on the phagocytosis of microscopic particulates and on the parasitism of bacteria by virus.
从兔腹腔分离出的巨噬细胞可在体外从溶液中摄取放射性胶体金。这一反应(超吞噬作用)包括两个阶段:金在细胞表面的可逆吸附以及随后表面结合胶体不可逆地进入细胞内。后一过程(称为摄取)似乎以一种在任何时刻都与附着在细胞表面的金量成正比的速率进行;而细胞表面的金量又可通过简单的吸附等温线与细胞外液中的浓度相关联。因此,就速率而言,摄取与细胞外金浓度的关系,与许多酶反应与底物浓度的关系相同。虽然酶动力学有助于描述超吞噬作用的速率,但没有证据表明酶参与吸附或摄取过程,也没有证据表明巨噬细胞需要代谢能量。嗜异性系列的渗出白细胞与这些细分散的金溶胶(平均粒径6至9毫微米)几乎没有或没有相互作用。在37℃时,三个参数足以表征金与巨噬细胞悬液之间的反应,即亲和常数(1/K(s))、最大吸附量(L)和摄取速率常数(k(3))。尽管不同渗出液的细胞之间数值差异显著,但在三个实例中都对这三个参数进行了估计。在这些悬液中,每分钟有2%至20%的表面结合金被摄取(37℃,pH 7.4)。在表面饱和的条件下,估计平均每个巨噬细胞表面附着有数以万计的金颗粒;然而,这么多的胶体占据的细胞表面几何面积不到1%。虽然表面饱和对摄取速率施加了上限,但未观察到巨噬细胞继续反应的能力有实际限制。光学测量表明,胶体金在摄取后立即在细胞内开始凝集。这些数据与已发表的关于微观颗粒吞噬作用和病毒对细菌寄生作用的动力学研究进行了比较。