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Respiratory Bursts in Garlic Treated Macrophages. Shannon Proctor Departments of Chemistry and Biology Jacksonville University. Macrophages. Greek for “big eaters” Originate from white blood cells called monocytes They play many roles in the body
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Respiratory Bursts in Garlic Treated Macrophages Shannon Proctor Departments of Chemistry and Biology Jacksonville University
Macrophages • Greek for “big eaters” • Originate from white blood cells called monocytes • They play many roles in the body • Major role in immunity and the immune response
Electron micrograph of a macrophage attacking bacteria. www.hartnell.edu/biology Representation of macrophages that I worked with using an inverted microscope.
Background • Garlic has been used since ancient times as an herbal remedy. • Heart disease • Tumors • The Plague • Antibacterial properties
Background • Previous research has shown that garlic enhances macrophage activity. • Leishmania major, Ghazanfari 2005 • Augmentation of function, Lau 1991 • Enhanced immunocompetence, Lamm 2001 • Our lab has shown that garlic does increase phagocytosis in macrophages
Internalization vs. Digestion • Macrophages will phagocytose many things • Engulf the particle • May or may not destroy • There is a chemical change when they digest • O2 uptake increases • Rapid release of reactive oxygen species • This is what we want to measure
Abstract • An increase in the respiratory burst would be significant • Nitro-blue tetrazolium (NBT) • Yellow solution that turns blue
Cell Culture • IC-21 Cells • Cultured in RPMI media • Incubated at 37°C, 5% CO2
Phagocytosis Assay • Subcultured at 100% confluency • Detached • Resuspended in control and media with garlic (0.5% or 1%) • Incubation for 3hrs • Addition of latex beads and fresh media
Phagocytosis Assay • Repeated every 30, 60, and 90 minutes • Incubation throughout • Assay stopped by washing • Staining using Hema 3 kit • Inverted microscope for viewing • 175-250 cells were counted and analyzed
Results * = Control (60 % ethanol) = Garlic * P=.055, Student’s T-test Percent phagocytosis measured using the following equation: (# of macrophages with engulfed bead ÷ total # macrophages) X 100 D. Lindsey and K. Jackson, 2006
Results • NBT Test • Dissolve 1 tablet in water • Fix cells (no staining) • Cover cells with NBT solution and incubate at 37°C for 30 minutes • Rinse with filtered PBS • Observe color under microscope
Conclusion • Future research could use latex beads to ensure phagocytosis and use a bacterium, for example, to measure the respiratory burst
Acknowledgements • Dr. Karen Jackson, advisor • Patricia Roman and Curtis Dobrowolski • Jacksonville University Public Safety
References • Buescher, E., Alling, D., and Gallin, J. (1985) Use of an x-linked human neutrophil marker to estimate timing of lyonization and size of the dividing stem cell pool. Journal of Clinical Investigation 76 (4), 1581-1584. • Ghazanfari, T., Hassan, Z., and Khamesipour, A. (2005). Enhancement of peritoneal macrophage phagocytic activity against Leishmania major by garlic (AlliumSativum) treatment. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 103 (3), 333-337. • Lindsey, D. and Jackson, K. (2006). AlliumsativumEffects on Phagocytic Activity of IC-21 Peritoneal Macrophages in vitro