Mechanism of augmentation of the antibody response in vitro by 2-mercaptoethanol in murine lymphocytes. II. A major role of the mixed disulfide between 2-mercaptoethanol and cysteine
- PMID: 6861210
- DOI: 10.1016/0008-8749(83)90060-6
Mechanism of augmentation of the antibody response in vitro by 2-mercaptoethanol in murine lymphocytes. II. A major role of the mixed disulfide between 2-mercaptoethanol and cysteine
Abstract
Five thiol compounds including 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME) were examined for their augmenting effects on in vitro antibody response to sheep erythrocytes. Three compounds were effective with the following order of activity; 2-ME greater than dithiothreitol greater than cysteamine. Glutathione and thioglycollate failed to enhance the response. The same order or effectiveness was seen in the stimulation of [35S]cystine uptake by murine lymphocytes by these thiols. Murine lymphocytes took up cysteine five to six times more rapidly than cystine. It is, however, unlikely that 2-ME stimulation of cystine uptake is solely due to the reduction of cystine into cysteine, because 2-ME was still stimulatory after free thiol groups had disappeared in the medium containing 2-ME and [35S]cystine. The mixed disulfide of cysteine with 2-ME (Cys-2-ME) was found to be an only product after free thiols had been oxidized. [35S]Cys-2-ME was taken up by the lymphocytes with a comparable rate to cysteine via a transport system common to that of leucine and phenylalanine. Cysteine was, however, transported via a different route. It was observed that Cys-2-ME was readily metabolized to cysteine and glutathione after the uptake. Cys-2-ME added to cystine-free RPMI 1640 medium could support the antibody response as efficiently as cystine plus 2-ME. These observations strongly suggest that 2-Me stimulates cystine uptake and, therefore, enhances the antibody response through the formation of the mixed disulfide with cysteine.
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