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IPR005442 is a Glutathione S-transferase, omega-class.
<p>Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) are soluble proteins with typical molecular masses of around 50kDa, each composed of two polypeptide subunits. GSTs catalyse the transfer of the tripeptide glutathione (gamma-glutamyl-cysteinyl-glycine; GSH) to a co-substrate (R-X) containing a reactive electrophillic centre to form a polar S-glutathionylated reaction product (R-SG). Each soluble GST is a dimer of approximately 26kDa subunits, typically forming a hydrophobic 50kDa protein with an isoelectric point in the pH range 4-5. The ability to form heterodimers greatly increases the diversity of the GSTs, but the functional significance of this mixing and matching of subunits has yet to be determined. Each GST subunit of the protein dimer contains an independent catalytic site composed of two components. The first is a binding site specific for GSH or a closely related homologue (the G site) formed from a conserved group of amino-acid residues in the amino-terminal domain of the polypeptide. The second component is a site that binds the hydrophobic substrate (the H site), which is much more structurally variable and is formed from residues in the carboxy-terminal domain. Between the two domains is a short variable linker region of 5-10 residues.</p> <p>The GST proteins have evolved by gene duplication to perform a range of functional roles. GSTs also have non-catalytic roles, binding flavonoid natural products in the cytosol prior to their deposition in the vacuole. Recent studies have also implicated GSTs as components of ultraviolet-inducible cell signalling pathways and as potential regulators of apoptosis.</p> <p>The mammalian GSTs active in drug metabolism are now classified into the alpha, mu and pi classes. Additional classes of GSTs have been identified in animals that do not have major roles in drug metabolism; these include the sigma GSTs, which function as prostaglandin synthases. In cephalopods, however, sigma GSTs are lens S-crystallins, giving an indication of the functional diversity of these proteins. The soluble glutathione transferases can be divided into the phi, tau, theta, zeta and lambda classes. The theta and zeta GSTs have counterparts in animals, whereas the other classes are plant-specific. In the case of phi and tau GSTs, only subunits from the same class will dimerise. Within a class, however, the subunits can dimerise even if they are quite different in amino-acid sequence. An insect-specific delta class has also been described, and bacteria contain a prokaryote-specific beta class of GST.</p> <p>Recombinant human omega-class GST shows glutathione-dependent thiol transferase and dehydroascorbate reduction activity. This sort of activity has not been observed in any other class of GSTs, but is associated with the glutaredoxins (thioltransferases). Members of this class of GST have a novel unique N-terminal extension, and a cysteine residue in the active site, which is different from the tyrosine and serine residues found at the active sites of other eukaryotic GSTs [[cite:PUB00007307]].</p>
This description is obtained from EB-eye REST.
GO predictions are based solely on the InterPro-to-GO mappings published by EMBL-EBI, which are in turn based on the mapping of predicted domains to the InterPro dataset. The InterPro-to-GO mapping was last updated on , while the GO metadata was last updated on .
GO term | Namespace | Name | Definition | Relationships |
---|---|---|---|---|
Molecular function | Glutathione transferase activity | Catalysis of the reaction: R-X + glutathione = H-X + R-S-glutathione. R may be an aliphatic, aromatic or heterocyclic group; X may be a sulfate, nitrile or halide group. | ||
Cellular component | Cytoplasm | All of the contents of a cell excluding the plasma membrane and nucleus, but including other subcellular structures. |
Transcript | Name | Description | Predicted domains | Domain count |
---|---|---|---|---|
– | Intracellular chloride channel [Medicago truncatula] gi|92882348|gb|ABE86679.1| | 18 | ||
– | Glutathione S-transferase; TAIR: AT2G29420.1 glutathione S-transferase tau 7; Swiss-Prot: sp|Q9FQA3|GST23_MAIZE Glutathione transferase GST 23; TrEMBL-Plants: tr|I3SF61|I3SF61_LOTJA Uncharacterized protein; Found in the gene: LotjaGi5g1v0258300 | 21 |
A list of co-occurring predicted domains within the L. japonicus gene space:
Predicted domain | Source | Observations | Saturation (%) |
---|---|---|---|
cd03185 | CDD | 1 | 50.00 |