Thiol/disulphide exchange reaction: A key regulatory process in biological systems


Autoria(s): Chaudhuri, Amitabha
Data(s)

10/04/1995

Resumo

Cysteine residues in proteins serve many important functions such as stabilizing and maintaining the three-dimensional conformation of many proteins(1), in enzyme catalysis, as a residue undergoing post-translational 2 and in the formation of DNA-binding modification domain of a class of transcriptional activators(3), It is also involved in biological redox coupling(4) and xenobiotic metabolism(5). Disulphide bonds formed by xenobiotic metabolism oxidation of cysteine residues have been used as a probe to study the structure/function relationships of proteins, Introducing novel disulphide bonds in proteins to increase their thermal stability and, therefore, the shelf life is an important goal of protein engineering(6,7), In addition, the thiol group of cysteine residue participates in a reaction termed as thiol/disulphide exchange reaction, the biological significance of this reaction being the theme of this review.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/37978/1/p.....pdf

Chaudhuri, Amitabha (1995) Thiol/disulphide exchange reaction: A key regulatory process in biological systems. In: Current Science (Bangalore), 68 (7). pp. 692-698.

Publicador

Indian Academy of Sciences

Relação

http://www.ias.ac.in/j_archive/currsci/68/vol68contents.html

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/37978/

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed