氧化还原
生物
酶
光合作用
叶绿体
生物化学
生物物理学
硫醇
小分子
新陈代谢
氧化应激
氧化磷酸化
化学
有机化学
基因
作者
Johannes Knuesting,Renate Scheibe
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.tplants.2018.06.007
摘要
Oxygenic photosynthesis gave rise to a regulatory mechanism based on reversible redox-modifications of enzymes. In chloroplasts, such on-off switches separate metabolic pathways to avoid futile cycles. During illumination, the redox interconversions allow for rapidly and finely adjusting activation states of redox-regulated enzymes. Noncovalent effects by metabolites binding to these enzymes, here addressed as 'small molecules', affect the rates of reduction and oxidation. The chloroplast enzymes provide an example for a versatile regulatory principle where small molecules govern thiol switches to integrate redox state and metabolism for an appropriate response to environmental challenges. In general, this principle can be transferred to reactive thiols involved in redox signaling, oxidative stress responses, and in disease of all organisms.
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