Accession Number:

ADA063750

Title:

Temperature Effects on Shape and Function of Human Granulocytes.

Corporate Author:

CENTER FOR BLOOD RESEARCH BOSTON MASS

Report Date:

1978-11-10

Abstract:

Scanning microscopic and functional studies were made of granulocytes isolated from CPD anticoagulated whole blood by counterflow centrifugation in a Beckman JE-6 rotor. The collection buffer was phosphate 20 mM buffered saline 280 mOsM with glucose 28 mM and human serum albumin 1.2 wv. The final suspension contained less than 2 mononuclear cells and 5 red cells. Incubation and fixation at various temperatures revealed two distinct temperature dependent shape transformations. At 22, 37, 40 and 45 deg C granulocytes were ameboid with extensive highly textured veils. These smoothed progressively, bullae and blebs formed, and membranes peeled finally leaving nonfunctional spheres with smooth surfaces. At 4 deg C, granulocytes were irregular spheres, less rugose but with numerous microvilli and nodules. Veiling was absent. Phagocytosis, initially low, progressively declined over 48 hours while cell surfaces became smooth. Some formed blebs, but all terminated as nonfunctional spheres with untextured surfaces containing occasional large single holes. Cellular stability estimated from changes in volume distributions, and phagocytosis by microfluorescence measurements of yeast and latex particle ingestion were also temperature dependent and paralleled the shape progressions. It is concluded that at body 30 deg C for fever 40 deg C temperatures, granulocytes have dynamic membranar surfaces characterized by extensive veiling and high function. At 4 deg C they are relatively inactive spheres devoid of pseudopodia or veils, yet functional at slow rates. Author

Descriptive Note:

Annual rept. 30 Nov 77-10 Nov 78,

Pages:

0029

Identifiers:

Subject Categories:

Communities Of Interest:

Modernization Areas:

Contract Number:

N00014-73-C-0100

Contract Number 2:

PHS-CA-12178-06

File Size:

12.48MB