a Department of Microbiology, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio
ABSTRACT
Cultured mouse peritoneal macrophages were found to be relatively impermeable to streptomycin. Based on radioactivity measurements and radioautographic evidence, macrophages were impermeable to tritiated dihydrostreptomycin for periods up to 20 hr of incubation. Little or no intracellular streptomycin could be detected even when incubation was carried out in the presence of therapeutic blood levels of carrier dihydrostreptomycin. When the cultured mouse macrophages were allowed to phagocytize staphylococci, yeast cells, or polystyrene latex particles in the presence of tritiated streptomycin, the impermeability of the cells to the antibiotic was not affected. These observations suggested that the process of phagocytosis does not facilitate the intracellular accumulation of streptomycin, as seems to be the case for the fixed phagocytic cells of the liver.
1 U.S. Public Health Service Career Development Awardee (AI K3, 16,399).
2 Medical student summer fellow sponsored by the U.S. Public Health Service General Research Support Grant (1-SO1-FR-5408-04-5).
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