Phagocytosis of microorganisms, senescent cells, apoptotic bodies, and effete tissue material is an important process in host
defense and tissue homeostasis. A method is described to measure, in living macrophages, the kinetics of particle engulfment
and lysosome/phagosome targeting. Plasma membranes or lysosomes are labeled with tritiated lipids, followed by exposure of
cells to scintillant microbeads. Because of the short range of tritium β-particles, geometric factors, and the confinement
of lipids to membranes, scintillation can only be elicited by tracer molecules in membranes immediately vicinal to the scintillant.
When the plasma membrane.is labeled with [3H]cholesterol, a signal is produced on bead–cell contact and engulfment and then reaches steady state within 45 min. When
lysosomes are labeled with nonhydrolyzable [3H]cholesterol oleyl ether, scintillation requires intracellular lysosome/phagosome attachment or fusion, and steady state
is attained only after several hours. The live-cell scintillation proximity approach is useful for examining the effects of
pharmacological and genetic manipulations on particle uptake and on lysosome/phagosome targeting.
Keywords Cholesterol – endocytosis – endosomes – lysosomes – phagosomes – plasma membrane