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Live-cell imaging of macrophage phagocytosis of asbestos fibers under fluorescence microscopy.

Takenori IshidaNobutoshi FujiharaTomoki NishimuraHisakage FunabashiRyuichi HirotaTakeshi IkedaAkio Kuroda
Published in: Genes and environment : the official journal of the Japanese Environmental Mutagen Society (2019)
Fluorescently labeled asbestos facilitated visualization of the dynamic biological processes that occur during and after the internalization of asbestos fibers, and indicated that (i) frustrated phagocytosis itself does not lead to immediate cell death unless the asbestos fiber is physically pulled from the cell by an external force, and (ii) macrophages that have phagocytosed asbestos can divide but sometimes the resulting daughter cells fuse, leading to the formation of a binucleated cell. This fusion only seemed to occur when a comparatively long asbestos fiber (> 10 μm) was shared by two daughter cells.
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