What is Phagocytosis?
Aside
from being one of the most fun words to say in science, the process of
phagocytosis is pretty cool in itself. Remember the old video game
Pac-Man? You guide the round, yellow character through a maze, dodging
ghosts and gobbling up little dots. When Pac-Man opens his mouth and
consumes one of the dots, it's a little bit like phagocytosis.
Phagocytosis is a type of endocytosis.
Endocytosis is a process through which a cell absorbs a particle,
molecule, bacterium, or other type of matter by engulfing it.
Phagocytosis refers to the engulfing of larger, solid particles. Often
the engulfed particle is another cell, like when a white blood cell,
which is a part of the immune system, engulfs a bacterium to destroy it.
The Process of Phagocytosis
Let's
use the example of a white blood cell engulfing an invading bacterium
to illustrate the process of phagocytosis. A cell that engages in
phagocytosis is called a phagocyte. First, the white blood cell
has to recognize the invader and realize that it needs to be destroyed.
It recognizes signal molecules released by the bacterium and is drawn
toward it.
The white blood cell then has to attach its membrane
to the membrane of the bacterium. It does this by using molecules called
surface receptors. These are molecules embedded in the white blood
cell's membrane that are designed to detect and attach to molecules in
the membrane of the bacterium. The two cell membranes link up and stick
together.
Once attached to each other, the membrane of the white
blood cell swells outward around the bacterium and engulfs it. The
membrane enclosing the bacterium pinches off and the result is a little
pouch, called a phagosome, that contains the offending bacterium inside of the white blood cell.
With
the bacterium safely imprisoned inside the white blood cell, it can now
be destroyed. The white blood cell brings digestive enzymes into the
phagosome. These enzymes break up the bacterium and the resulting
harmless particles can either be used by the cell or released out of the
cell.
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