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单词 phagocytosis
释义

phagocytosis


phag·o·cy·to·sis

P0232100 (făg′ə-sī-tō′sĭs)n. The engulfing and destruction of particulate matter, such as a bacterium, by a cell.
phag′o·cy·tot′ic (-tŏt′ĭk) adj.

phagocytosis

(ˌfæɡəsaɪˈtəʊsɪs) or

phagocytism

n (Physiology) the process by which a cell, such as a white blood cell, ingests microorganisms, other cells, and foreign particles

phag•o•cy•to•sis

(ˌfæg ə saɪˈtoʊ sɪs)

n. the ingestion by a cell of a microorganism, cell particle, or other matter surrounded and engulfed by the cell. Compare endocytosis. [1890–95] phag`o•cy•tot′ic (-ˈtɒt ɪk) adj.

phagocytosis

the action of phagocytes in ingesting and destroying cells.See also: Blood and Blood Vessels, Cells

phagocytosis

1. A process of a cell actively engulfing other cells or food particles.2. A process by which certain cells engulf and destroy foreign particles or microorganisms such as bacteria.
Thesaurus
Noun1.phagocytosis - process in which phagocytes engulf and digest microorganisms and cellular debris; an important defense against infectionbodily function, bodily process, body process, activity - an organic process that takes place in the body; "respiratory activity"
Translations

phagocytosis


phagocytosis:

see endocytosisendocytosis
, in biology, process by which substances are taken into the cell. When the cell membrane comes into contact with a suitable food, a portion of the cell cytoplasm surges forward to meet and surround the material and a depression forms within the cell wall.
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.

Phagocytosis

A mechanism by which single cells of the animal kingdom, such as smaller protozoa, engulf and carry particles into the cytoplasm. It differs from endocytosis primarily in the size of the particle rather than in the mechanism; as particles approach the dimensions and solubility of macromolecules, cells take them up by the process of endocytosis.

Cells such as the free-living amebas or the wandering cells of the metazoa often can “sense” the direction of a potential food source and move toward it (chemotaxis). If, when the cell contacts the particle, the particle has the appropriate chemical composition, or surface charge, it adheres to the cell. The cell responds by forming a hollow, conelike cytoplasmic process around the particle, eventually surrounding it completely. Although the particle is internalized by this sequence of events, it is still enclosed in a portion of the cell's surface membrane and thus isolated from the cell's cytoplasm. The combined particle and membrane package is referred to as a food or phagocytic vacuole. See Vacuole

Ameboid cells of the metazoa also selectively remove foreign particles, bacteria, and other pathogens by phagocytosis. After the foreign particle or microorganism is trapped in a vacuole inside the macrophage, it is usually digested. To accomplish this, small packets (lysosomes) of lytic proenzymes are introduced into the phagocytic vacuole, where the enzymes are then dissolved and activated. See Lysosome

Phagocytosis

 

the engulfing and absorption of living and nonliving particles by unicellular organisms or specialized cells—phagocytes—in multicellular animals. Phagocytosis was discovered by E. Metchnikoff (I. I. Mechnikov), who traced its evolution and elucidated its function in the defense reactions of the higher animals and man, particularly those related to inflammation and immunity. The process plays a major role in the healing of wounds.

The ability to seize and digest particles, which is the basis of nutrition in primitive organisms, was gradually transferred in the course of evolution to certain specialized cells—initially to the digestive cells and later to some special cells in the connective tissues. In mammals and in man, the neutrophils (that is, micro-phages, or specialized leukocytes) and the reticuloendothelial cells are active phagocytes capable of being transformed into active macrophages. The neutrophils phagocytize small particles, such as bacteria, while macrophages can ingest such larger particles as dead cells and their nuclei and fragments. Marcrophages can also store the negatively charged particles of pigments and of colloidal substances. The ingestion of small colloidal particles is called ultraphagocytosis.

Phagocytosis—a process that requires the expenditure of energy—involves primarily the activity of the cell membrane and intracellular organoids, or lysosomes, which have a high content of hydrolytic enzymes. Phagocytosis proceeds in stages. After a phagocytable particle has attached itself to the cell membrane, an intracellular corpuscle, or phagosome, is formed by invagination of the membrane and the particle. Hydrolytic enzymes enter the phagosome from the surrounding lysosomes and digest the phagocytized particle. Depending on the particle’s physiochemi-cal properties, digestion may be complete or incomplete. In the latter case, a residual corpuscle is formed and may remain in the cell a long time.

REFERENCES

Mechnikov, I. I. Izbrannye biologicheskie proizvedeniia. Moscow, 1950.
Zil’ber, L. A. Osnovy immunologii, 3rd ed. Moscow, 1958.

N. G. KHRUSHCHOV

phagocytosis

[‚fag·ə‚sī′tō·səs] (cell and molecular biology) A specialized form of macropinocytosis in which cells engulf large solid objects such as bacteria and deliver the internalized objects to special digesting vacuoles; exists in certain cell types, such as macrophages and neutrophils.

phagocytosis


phagocytosis

 [fag″o-si-to´sis] the engulfing of microorganisms or other cells and foreign particles by phagocytes. adj., adj phagocytot´ic.Phagocytosis. From Damjanov, 2000.

phag·o·cy·to·sis

(fag'ō-sī-tō'sis), The process of ingestion and digestion by cells of solid substances, for example, other cells, bacteria, bits of necrotic tissue, foreign particles.
See also: endocytosis.
[phagocyte + G. -osis, condition]

phagocytosis

(făg′ə-sī-tō′sĭs)n. The engulfing and ingestion of foreign bodies such as bacteria or other cells by phagocytes or certain protists, such as amoebas.
phag′o·cy·tot′ic (-tŏt′ĭk) adj.

phag·o·cy·to·sis

(fāg'ō-sī-tō'sis) The process of ingestion and digestion by cells of solid substances, e.g., other cells, bacteria, bits of necrotic tissue, foreign particles.
See also: endocytosis
[phagocyte + G. -osis, condition]

phagocytosis

(fag?o-si-to'sis) [? + ? + osis, condition] PHAGOCYTOSISA three-stage process by which phagocytes (neutrophils, monocytes, and macrophages) engulf and destroy microorganisms, other foreign antigens, and cell debris. Generally, these substances must be covered with opsonins, such as antibodies or complement, to initiate binding with cell receptors on the phagocytes, the first stage in phagocytosis. In the second stage, the particle is engulfed and enclosed in a vacuole (phagosome). During the third stage, the phagosome merges with lysosomes whose enzymes destroy the engulfed particle. See: illustration; defensin; lysozyme; macrophage; neutrophil; oxygen radical

Most bacteria are killed during phagocytosis by oxygen radicals, which are formed during the respiratory burst when phagosomes and lysosomes merge. When oxygen radical production is excessive, tissue damage occurs. Lysozymes, defensins, and bacteriocidal permeability-increasing (BPI) protein also destroy bacteria and other organisms; their actions do not depend on the generation of oxygen radicals.

induced phagocytosis

Phagocytosis that is stimulated by the presence of opsonins such as antibodies.

spontaneous phagocytosis

Phagocytosis that occurs in the absence of opsonins.

phagocytosis

The envelopment and destruction of bacteria or other foreign bodies by PHAGOCYTES.

phagocytosis

the ingestion of materials (subcellular particles, cells) from the outside of a cell into its interior, forming a cytoplasmic vacuole.

Phagocytosis

A process by which a white blood cell envelopes and digests debris and microorganisms to remove them from the blood.Mentioned in: Legionnaires' Disease, White Blood Cell Count and Differential

phagocytosis 

The process of ingestion of solid substances (e.g. cells, bacteria, parts of necrosed tissue) by cells and transported to a site within the cell where it is broken down by lysosomal enzymes.

phag·o·cy·to·sis

(fāg'ō-sī-tō'sis) Process of ingestion and digestion by cells of solid substances. [phagocyte + G. -osis, condition]

phagocytosis


  • noun

Words related to phagocytosis

noun process in which phagocytes engulf and digest microorganisms and cellular debris

Related Words

  • bodily function
  • bodily process
  • body process
  • activity
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