macropinosomen
Macropinosomen, also called macropinosomes, are large endocytic vesicles formed during macropinocytosis, a fluid-phase uptake pathway in many animal cells. They arise when actin-driven membrane ruffles at the cell surface fold back onto the plasma membrane, enclosing extracellular fluid and solutes to create spherical vesicles that can range from several hundred nanometers up to a few micrometers in diameter. Unlike receptor-mediated endocytosis, macropinocytosis is relatively non-specific and is often stimulated by growth factors or cellular stress.
Formation and regulation of macropinosomen formation depend on signaling cascades that promote actin remodeling. Key players
Functions and significance vary by cell type. In immune cells such as macrophages and dendritic cells, macropinosomen