| Literature DB >> 36009343 |
Krisztina Bela1, Riyazuddin Riyazuddin1,2, Jolán Csiszár1.
Abstract
Glutathione peroxidases (GPXs) are non-heme peroxidases catalyzing the reduction of H2O2 or organic hydroperoxides to water or corresponding alcohols using glutathione (GSH) or thioredoxin (TRX) as a reducing agent. In contrast to animal GPXs, the plant enzymes are non-seleno monomeric proteins that generally utilize TRX more effectively than GSH but can be a putative link between the two main redox systems. Because of the substantial differences compared to non-plant GPXs, use of the GPX-like (GPXL) name was suggested for Arabidopsis enzymes. GPX(L)s not only can protect cells from stress-induced oxidative damages but are crucial components of plant development and growth. Due to fine-tuning the H2O2 metabolism and redox homeostasis, they are involved in the whole life cycle even under normal growth conditions. Significantly new mechanisms were discovered related to their transcriptional, post-transcriptional and post-translational modifications by describing gene regulatory networks, interacting microRNA families, or identifying Lys decrotonylation in enzyme activation. Their involvement in epigenetic mechanisms was evidenced. Detailed genetic, evolutionary, and bio-chemical characterization, and comparison of the main functions of GPXs, demonstrated their species-specific roles. The multisided involvement of GPX(L)s in the regulation of the entire plant life ensure that their significance will be more widely recognized and applied in the future.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidants; glutathione peroxidases; growth; reactive oxygen species; redox status; stress responses; thiol peroxidases
Year: 2022 PMID: 36009343 PMCID: PMC9404953 DOI: 10.3390/antiox11081624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Schematic representation of classification of plant peroxidases using information from the RedoxiBase database (https://peroxibase.toulouse.inra.fr, accessed on 22 June 2022) and in [3,10].
Biochemical properties of GPXs. AlkylOOH: alkyl hydroperoxide, CumOOH: cumene hydroperoxide, GSH: reduced glutathione, LOOH: lipid hydroperoxide, PCOOH: phoshatidylcholine hydroperoxide, PUFAOOH: polyunsaturated fatty acids hydroperoxide, ROOH: organic hydroperoxide, SeCys: Selenocysteine, TRX: thioredoxin.
| Protein | Active Site Cys/SeCys | Reducing Agent | Substrate | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| tetramer, dimer, or monomer | SeCys or Cys | GSH, TRX, NADPH | H2O2, LOOH, ROOH | [ |
|
| monomer | Cys | TRX | AlkylOOH | [ |
|
| monomer | Cys | TRX, GSH | AlkylOOH | [ |
Figure 2Schematic summary of regulation and main roles of cytoplasmic and nuclear localized plant glutathione peroxidases. (1) Transcriptional control of GPX gene expression via cis-regulatory elements and transcriptional factors, (2) post-transcriptional regulation of GPX mRNAs by splicing mechanisms, (3) GPX mRNAs can be targeted by different types of miRNAs, (4) Lys decrotonylation can increase the GPX protein activity. Abbreviations: APX, ascorbate peroxidase; AsA, ascorbic acid; CAT, catalase; DHA, dehydroascorbate; GPX, glutathione peroxidase; GR, glutathione reductase; GSH, reduced glutathione; GSSG, oxidized glutathione; GST, glutathione transferase; LOOH, lipid peroxide/hydroperoxide; mRNA, messenger RNA; miRNA, microRNA; POD, guaiacol peroxidase; RNS, reactive nitrogen species; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TFs, transcription factors; TRX, thioredoxin.
Figure 3Schematic representation of involvement of plant GPX(L)s in growth and development in different model and crop plants based on the results published in [32,34,41,56,67,69,87,88]. At: A. thaliana, Cl: C. lanatus, Dl: Dimocarpus longan, Os: O. sativa. Some parts of the figure were created with BioRender.com (accessed on 7 August 2022).
Main reported functions of relevant GPXs from different mammalian and plant species.
| Enzyme | Reported Function/Involvement | Organism | References | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stress Responses | Redox Regulation/ | Normal Metabolism | Development | ||||
|
| |||||||
| HsGPX1, -2, -3, -5, -6 | H2O2 and lipid hydroperoxide processing, stress tolerance | Insulin signalling | H2O2 and lipid hydroperoxide processing + | Male fertility |
| [ | |
| HsGPX4 | Lipid peroxidation, protein thiol oxidation | Cell death, | Protein thiol oxidation | Spermatogenesis, |
| [ | |
| HsGPX7 | General scavenging of ROS, lipid peroxides | Anti-carcinogenesis |
| [ | |||
| MmGPX4 | Anti-carcinogenesis | Spermatogenesis | Spermatogenesis, male fertility, embryogenic development |
| [ | ||
|
| AtGPXL1-8 | Diverse biotic and abiotic (heat, cold, salt, drought, osmotic and metal) stresses, ferroptosis | Maintenance of redox homeostasis, oxidative signal transducer in ABA and drought stress signalling, | Photosynthesis | Development in whole life cycle (embryogenesis, germination, root, shoot apical meristem, hypocotyl, root system, rosette leaves, flowering, pollen tube growth, fertilization, seed dormancy) |
| [ |
|
| OsGPX1-5 | Drought, salt, cold, oxidative stresses | Redox signalling, participation in the interaction between ER stress and redox homeostasis, | Photosynthesis and cellular respiration | In development during the whole life cycle (embryogenesis, germination, root-, shoot apical meristem, hypocotyl, root system, seedling development, rosette leaves, inflorescence and silique, pollen tube growth, seed setting, grain filling, seed dormancy) |
| [ |
| SlGPX1-5 (GSHPxle1-5) | Heat stress, cold, light stress | unknown | unknown | unknown |
| [ | |
| HvGPX1-3 | Oxidative stress, salt/osmotic stress, norflurazon, and paraquat resistance | unknown | unknown | unknown |
| [ | |
| BoGPX1-8 | Salinity, cold, waterlogging, and drought | Bn | unknown | In development of root, seed, leaf, stem, flower, and silique |
| [ | |
| BrGPX1-12 | Salinity, cold, waterlogging, and drought | unknown | In development of root, seed, leaf, stem, flower, and silique |
| [ | ||
| BnGPX1-25 | Salinity, cold, waterlogging, and drought | unknown | In development of root, seed, leaf, stem, flower, and silique |
| [ | ||
| GhGPX1-13 | Salt stress, heat, sulphate solution | Importance of GhGPXs in hormone signalling, regulation of redox homeostasis | unknown | In regulation of plant growth and development |
| [ | |
| TaGPX1-12 | Heat, drought and/or a combination, salt | Possible role of | GSH biosynthetic and metabolic processes, DNA metabolic processes | Putative roles in plant growth and development, in leaf developmental stages, roots, stems, spikes, and grain |
| [ | |
| ZmGPX1-7 | Drought, waterlogging | Stress regulation through regulatory elements and splicing mechanisms | Growth, development |
| [ | ||
Comparison of the involvement of heme-containing Class III peroxidases and the non-heme GPX(L) enzyme family in stress responses, growth and developmental processes and interactions with auxin and ethylene hormones.
| Function/Involvement in: | Heme-Peroxidases | Non-Heme Peroxidases |
|---|---|---|
| ROS metabolism | + | + |
| Redox signalling | + | + |
| Defence against pathogen infection | + | + |
| Defence against abiotic stresses | + | + |
| Wound healing | + | − |
| Cell wall metabolism | + | − |
| Lignification and suberization | + | − |
| Defence of membranes | − | + |
| Growth and development | + | + |
| Seed germination | + | + |
| Growth of roots | + | + |
| Growth of shoots | + | + |
| Flowering | + | + |
| Fertilization, pollen tube growth | + | + |
| Embryogenesis, seed development | + | + |
| Fruit growth and ripening | + | + |
| Interaction with plant hormones | + | + |
| Auxin catabolism | + | − |
| Auxin transport | − | + |
| Ethylene biosynthesis | + | + |
| Ethylene signalling | − | + |