ID | 853 |
---|---|
Name | thioredoxin reductase |
Synonyms | ACR 1; PLP; ACR1; AOEB166; Alu corepressor 1; Antioxidant enzyme B166; B166; Liver tissue 2D page spot 71B… |
ID | 1808 |
---|---|
Name | sulfoxide |
CAS | 5-[2-(octylsulfinyl)propyl]-1,3-benzodioxole |
PubMed | Abstract | RScore(About this table) |
---|---|---|
20306235 | Hawkes WC, Alkan Z: Regulation of Redox Signaling by Selenoproteins. Biol Trace Elem Res. 2010 Mar 20. The unique chemistry of has been both a resource and threat for life on Earth for at least the last 2.4 billion years. Reduction of to water allows extraction of more metabolic energy from organic fuels than is possible through anaerobic glycolysis. On the other hand, partially reduced can react indiscriminately with biomolecules to cause genetic damage, disease, and even death. Organisms in all three superkingdoms of life have developed elaborate mechanisms to protect against such oxidative damage and to exploit reactive species as sensors and signals in myriad processes. The amino acids, and are the main targets of reactive species in proteins. Oxidative modifications to and can have profound effects on a protein's activity, structure, stability, and subcellular localization. Non-reversible oxidative modifications (oxidative damage) may contribute to molecular, cellular, and organismal aging and serve as signals for repair, removal, or programmed cell death. Reversible oxidation events can function as transient signals of physiological status, extracellular environment, nutrient availability, metabolic state, cell cycle phase, immune function, or sensory stimuli. Because of its chemical similarity to and stronger nucleophilicity and acidity, is an extremely efficient catalyst of reactions between and Most of the biological activity of is due to selenoproteins containing the 21st genetically encoded protein amino acid. The most abundant selenoproteins in mammals are the peroxidases (five to six genes) that reduce peroxide and lipid hydroperoxides at the expense of and serve to limit the strength and duration of reactive signals. Thioredoxin reductases (three genes) use to reduce oxidized thioredoxin and its homologs, which regulate a plethora of redox signaling events. reductase B1 reduces back to using thioredoxin as a reductant. Several selenoproteins in the endoplasmic reticulum are involved in the regulation of protein disulfide formation and unfolded protein response signaling, although their precise biological activities have not been determined. The most widely distributed selenoprotein family in Nature is represented by the highly conserved thioredoxin-like selenoprotein W and its homologs that have not yet been assigned specific biological functions. Recent evidence suggests selenoprotein W and the six other small thioredoxin-like mammalian selenoproteins may serve to transduce peroxide signals into regulatory disulfide bonds in specific target proteins. |
1(0,0,0,1) |