Abstract
Abstract
The objective of the present study was to determine whether chick B cells possess a specific transport system for taurine. The Bursa of Fabricius was isolated from newly hatched to 6-week-old chicks and an enriched fraction (86.2%) of B cells was isolated. The chick B cells maintained a high intracellular taurine concentration (0.8–1.12 mM) that decreased with age. The B cells exhibited carrier-mediated and simple diffusion uptake components, but only the carrier-mediated component increased with age. Inhibitor studies indicated taurine uptake was sodium and energy dependent. The data demonstrate that chick B cells possess a specialized taurine transport system and the activity of this system changes during posthatch B cell development.
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