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InterPro: IPR010987 Glutathione S-transferase, C-terminal-like
Protein matches
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UniProtKB Matches: 12531 proteins |
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Accession
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IPR010987 Glutathione-S-Trfase_C-like |
Type
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Domain |
Signatures
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InterPro Relationships
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Children
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IPR007494 Glutaredoxin 2, C-terminal
IPR017933 Glutathione S-transferase/chloride channel, C-terminal
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Found in
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IPR004526 Glutamyl-tRNA synthetase, class Ic, archaeal/eukaryotic cytosolic
IPR017410 Outer mitochondrial membrane transport complex protein, Metaxin
IPR019564 Outer mitochondrial membrane transport complex protein, Tom37/Metaxin
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Contains
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IPR003083 S-crystallin/Sigma class glutathione-S-transferase
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InterPro annotation
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Entry Details in BioMart
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Abstract
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In eukaryotes, glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) participate in the detoxification of reactive electrophillic compounds by catalysing their conjugation to glutathione. GST is found as a domain in S-crystallins from squid, and proteins with no known GST activity, such as eukaryotic elongation factors 1-gamma and the HSP26 family of stress-related proteins, which include auxin-regulated proteins in plants and stringent starvation proteins in Escherichia coli. The major lens polypeptide of cephalopods is also a GST [1]. Bacterial GSTs of known function often have a specific, growth-supporting role in biodegradative metabolism: epoxide ring opening and tetrachlorohydroquinone reductive dehalogenation are two examples of the reactions catalysed by these bacterial GSTs. Some regulatory proteins, like the stringent starvation proteins, also belong to the GST family [2]. GST seems to be absent from Archaea in which gamma-glutamylcysteine substitute to glutathione as major thiol.
Glutathione S-transferases form homodimers, but in eukaryotes can also form heterodimers of the A1 and A2 or YC1 and YC2 subunits. The homodimeric enzymes display a conserved structural fold. Each monomer is composed of a distinct N-terminal sub-domain, which adopts the thioredoxin fold, and a C-terminal all-helical sub-domain, which adopts a 4-helical bundle fold. This entry is the C-terminal domain.
Glutaredoxin 2 (Grx2), glutathione-dependent disulphide oxidoreductases, is structurally similar to GSTs, even though they lack any sequence similarity. Grx2 is also composed of N and C-terminal subdomains. It is thought that the primary function of Grx2 is to catalyse reversible glutathionylation of proteins with glutathione in cellular redox regulation including the response to oxidative stress. Grx2 is dissimilar to other glutaredoxins apart from containing the conserved active site residues [3].
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Structural links
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Additional Reading
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Parker LJ, Ciccone S, Italiano LC, Primavera A, Oakley AJ, Morton CJ, Hancock NC, Bello ML, Parker MW.
The anti-cancer drug chlorambucil as a substrate for the human polymorphic enzyme glutathione transferase P1-1: kinetic properties and crystallographic characterisation of allelic variants.
J. Mol. Biol. 380 2008 131-44
[PubMed: 18511072]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2008.04.066
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Hohwy M, Spadola L, Lundquist B, Hawtin P, Dahmen J, Groth-Clausen I, Nilsson E, Persdotter S, von Wachenfeldt K, Folmer RH, Edman K.
Novel prostaglandin D synthase inhibitors generated by fragment-based drug design.
J. Med. Chem. 51 2008 2178-86
[PubMed: 18341273]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jm701509k
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Allocati N, Federici L, Masulli M, Favaloro B, Di Ilio C.
Cysteine 10 is critical for the activity of Ochrobactrum anthropi glutathione transferase and its mutation to alanine causes the preferential binding of glutathione to the H-site.
Proteins 71 2008 16-23
[PubMed: 18076047]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/prot.21835
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Perbandt M, Hoppner J, Burmeister C, Luersen K, Betzel C, Liebau E.
Structure of the extracellular glutathione S-transferase OvGST1 from the human pathogenic parasite Onchocerca volvulus.
J. Mol. Biol. 377 2008 501-11
[PubMed: 18258257]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2008.01.029
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Hegazy UM, Tars K, Hellman U, Mannervik B.
Modulating catalytic activity by unnatural amino acid residues in a GSH-binding loop of GST P1-1.
J. Mol. Biol. 376 2008 811-26
[PubMed: 18177897]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2007.12.013
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InterPro 23.1
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