Causes and Consequences of Cysteine S-Glutathionylation

Christina L. Grek(Io Therapeutics (United States)), Jie Zhang, Yefim Manevich, Danyelle M. Townsend(Medical University of South Carolina), Kenneth D. Tew
Journal of Biological Chemistry
July 17, 2013
Cited by 315Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Post-translational S-glutathionylation occurs through the reversible addition of a proximal donor of glutathione to thiolate anions of cysteines in target proteins, where the modification alters molecular mass, charge, and structure/function and/or prevents degradation from sulfhydryl overoxidation or proteolysis. Catalysis of both the forward (glutathione S-transferase P) and reverse (glutaredoxin) reactions creates a functional cycle that can also regulate certain protein functional clusters, including those involved in redox-dependent cell signaling events. For translational application, S-glutathionylated serum proteins may be useful as biomarkers in individuals (who may also have polymorphic expression of glutathione S-transferase P) exposed to agents that cause oxidative or nitrosative stress.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis