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  2. Glutathione synthetase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutathione_synthetase

    Other names in common use include glutathione synthetase, and GSH synthetase. This enzyme participates in glutamate metabolism and glutathione metabolism. At least one compound, Phosphinate is known to inhibit this enzyme. [citation needed] The biosynthetic mechanisms for synthetases use energy from nucleoside triphosphates, whereas synthases ...

  3. Glutamate–cysteine ligase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutamate–cysteine_ligase

    GSH, and by extension GCL, is critical to cell survival. Nearly every eukaryotic cell, from plants to yeast to humans, expresses a form of the GCL protein for the purpose of synthesizing GSH. To further highlight the critical nature of this enzyme, genetic knockdown of GCL results in embryonic lethality. [1]

  4. Glutathione - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutathione

    This reaction is the rate-limiting step in glutathione synthesis. [3] Second, glycine is added to the C-terminal of γ-glutamylcysteine. This condensation is catalyzed by glutathione synthetase. While all animal cells are capable of synthesizing glutathione, glutathione synthesis in the liver has been shown to be essential.

  5. Glutathione synthetase deficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutathione_synthetase...

    Mild glutathione synthetase deficiency usually results in the destruction of red blood cells (hemolytic anemia). Rarely, affected people also excrete large amounts of a compound called 5-oxoproline (also called pyroglutamic acid, or pyroglutamate) in their urine (5-oxoprolinuria). This compound builds up when glutathione is not processed ...

  6. Glutathione S-transferase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutathione_S-transferase

    The detoxification reactions comprise the first four steps of mercapturic acid synthesis, [19] with the conjugation to GSH serving to make the substrates more soluble and allowing them to be removed from the cell by transporters such as multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 . [8]

  7. Glutathione reductase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutathione_reductase

    Glutathione reductase (GR) also known as glutathione-disulfide reductase (GSR) is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the GSR gene.Glutathione reductase (EC 1.8.1.7) catalyzes the reduction of glutathione disulfide to the sulfhydryl form glutathione (), which is a critical molecule in resisting oxidative stress and maintaining the reducing environment of the cell.

  8. Glutathione peroxidase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutathione_peroxidase

    A second GSH molecule reduces the GS-SeR intermediate back to the selenol, releasing GS-SG as the by-product. A simplified representation is shown below: [5] RSeH + H 2 O 2 → RSeOH + H 2 O RSeOH + GSH → GS-SeR + H 2 O GS-SeR + GSH → GS-SG + RSeH. Glutathione reductase then reduces the oxidized glutathione to complete the cycle:

  9. Bacterial glutathione transferase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterial_glutathione...

    As the key substrate in GST-mediated reactions, glutathione is one of the most conserved reducing agents in bacterial cells. In its reduced form, glutathione plays a key role in the regulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the cell. ROS are specific to aerobic cells and are usually produced in their metabolic processes.