Phagocytes are
cells that protect the body by ingesting (
phagocytosing) harmful foreign particles,
bacteria, and dead or
dying cells. Their name comes from the
Greek phagein, "to eat" or "devour", and "-cyte", the suffix in biology denoting "cell", from the Greek
kutos, "hollow vessel". They are essential for fighting infections and for subsequent
immunity. Phagocytes are important throughout the animal kingdom and are highly developed within vertebrates. One
litre of human blood contains about six billion phagocytes. They were first discovered in 1882 by
Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov while he was studying
starfish larvae. Mechnikov was awarded the 1908
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery. Phagocytes occur in many species; some
amoebae behave like macrophage phagocytes, which suggests that phagocytes appeared early in the evolution of life.