Macrophages (, from Greek
μακρος (
makros) = large,
φαγειν (
phagein) = to eat) are a type of
white blood cell that engulfs and digests cellular debris, foreign substances,
microbes, cancer cells, and anything else that does not have the types of proteins specific to the surface of healthy body cells on its surface in a process called
phagocytosis. These large
phagocytes are found in essentially all tissues, where they patrol for potential
pathogens by
amoeboid movement. Besides phagocytosis, they play a critical role in nonspecific defense (
innate immunity) and also help initiate specific defense mechanisms (
adaptive immunity) by recruiting other immune cells such as
lymphocytes. For example, they are important as
antigen presenters to
T cells. In humans, dysfunctional macrophages cause severe diseases such as
chronic granulomatous disease that result in frequent infections.