This study examines the effect of cysteine on the autoxidation of homocysteine, a process that has been implicated in the pathological mechanism of hyperhomocysteinemia with respect to arteriosclerosis and vascular disease. It is shown that homocysteine autoxidizes at a much slower rate that cysteine, but that low concentrations of cysteine dramatically accelerate homocysteine oxidation and increase the rate of homocysteine-dependent oxygen consumption. It is proposed that the major role of homocysteine is to reduce cystine to cysteine, and that cysteine autoxidation is the mechanism by which thiol-dependent oxidative stress occurs.
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