Litcius/Paper detail

Degradation of glutathione and glutathione conjugates in plants

Takehiro Ito, Naoko Ohkama‐Ohtsu

2023Journal of Experimental Botany64 citationsDOI

Abstract

Glutathione (GSH) is a ubiquitous, abundant, and indispensable thiol for plants that participates in various biological processes, such as scavenging reactive oxygen species, redox signaling, storage and transport of sulfur, detoxification of harmful substances, and metabolism of several compounds. Therefore knowledge of GSH metabolism is essential for plant science. Nevertheless, GSH degradation has been insufficiently elucidated, and this has hampered our understanding of plant life. Over the last five decades, the γ-glutamyl cycle has been dominant in GSH studies, and the exoenzyme γ-glutamyl transpeptidase has been regarded as the major GSH degradation enzyme. However, recent studies have shown that GSH is degraded in cells by cytosolic enzymes such as γ-glutamyl cyclotransferase or γ-glutamyl peptidase. Meanwhile, a portion of GSH is degraded after conjugation with other molecules, which has also been found to be carried out by vacuolar γ-glutamyl transpeptidase, γ-glutamyl peptidase, or phytochelatin synthase. These findings highlight the need to re-assess previous assumptions concerning the γ-glutamyl cycle, and a novel overview of the plant GSH degradation pathway is essential. This review aims to build a foundation for future studies by summarizing current understanding of GSH/glutathione conjugate degradation.

Topics & Concepts

GlutathioneBiochemistryDetoxification (alternative medicine)Reactive oxygen speciesChemistryPhytochelatinEnzymeCytosolMetabolismGlutaredoxinGlutathione reductaseGlutathione synthetaseGlutathione disulfideBiologyGlutathione peroxidaseAlternative medicineMedicinePathologyNitrogen and Sulfur Effects on BrassicaSulfur Compounds in BiologyGenomics, phytochemicals, and oxidative stress