The process of engulfing a foreign particle - phagocytosis - is of fundamental importance for a wide diversity of organisms. From simple unicellular organisms that use phagocytosis to obtain their next meal, to complex metazoans in which phagocytic cells represent an essential branch of the immune system, cells have been equipped with a repertoire of signaling molecules that serve to bring about this complex event. Despite the diversity of cell-types and end-purposes that make use of this phenomenon, all phagocytic processes are driven by a finely controlled rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton to form the phagosome upon activation of specific cell-surface receptors that identify the particle or cell of interest....