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The emerging roles of protein glutathionylation in chloroplasts

Authors :
Mariette Bedhomme
Stéphane D. Lemaire
Paolo Trost
Mirko Zaffagnini
Zaffagnini M.
Bedhomme M.
Lemaire S.D.
Trost P.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Reactive oxygen species play important roles in redox signaling mainly through a set of reversible post-translational modifications of cysteine thiol residues in proteins, including glutathionylation and dithiol/disulfide exchange. Protein glutathionylation has been extensively studied in mammals but emerging evidence suggests that it can play important roles in plants and in chloroplast in particular. This redox modification involves protein thiols and glutathione and is mainly controlled by glutaredoxins, oxidoreductases belonging to the thioredoxin superfamily. In this review, we first present the possible mechanisms of protein glutathionylation and then introduce the chloroplast systems of glutaredoxins and thioredoxins, in order to pinpoint the biochemical properties that make some glutaredoxin isoforms the master enzymes in deglutathionylation. Finally, we discuss the possible roles of glutathionylation in thiol protection, protein regulation, reactive oxygen species scavenging and redox signaling in chloroplasts, with emphasis on the crosstalk between thioredoxin- and glutaredoxin-mediated signaling pathways.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec707e7c0f36f6085f0b901203c16b36