Litcius/Paper detail

How are hydrogen peroxide messages relayed to affect cell signalling?

Elizabeth A. Veal, Paraskevi Kritsiligkou

2024Current Opinion in Chemical Biology27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

signals trigger adaptive responses affecting cell division, differentiation, migration, and survival. These signals are transduced by selective oxidation of cysteines on specific target proteins, with redox-sensitive cysteines now identified in many proteins, including both kinases and phosphatases. Assessing the contribution of these oxidation events to cell signalling presents several challenges including understanding how and when the selective oxidation of specific proteins takes place in vivo. In recent years, a combination of biochemical, structural, genetic, and computational approaches in fungi, plants, and animals have revealed different ways in which thiol peroxidases (peroxiredoxins) are bypassed or utilised in relaying these signals. Together, these mechanisms provide a conceptual framework for selectively oxidising proteins that will further advance understanding of how redox modifications contribute to health and disease.

Topics & Concepts

Hydrogen peroxideAffect (linguistics)SignallingCell biologyChemistryCellBiologyBiochemistryCommunicationPsychologyRedox biology and oxidative stressPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchbioluminescence and chemiluminescence research