Prxs were historically divided into three (mechanistic) classes: typical 2-Cys Prxs, atypical 2-Cys Prxs, and 1-Cys Prxs. The designation of "1-Cys" and "2-Cys" Prxs was introduced in 1994 as it was noticed that, among the 22 Prx sequences known at the time, only one Cys residue was absolutely conserved; this is the residue now recognized as the (required) peroxidatic cysteine, CP. The second, semi-conserved cysteine noted at the time is the resolving cysteine, CR, which forms an intersubunit disulfide bond with CP in the widespread and abundant Prxs sometimes referred to as the "typical 2-Cys Prxs". Ultimately it was realized that the CR can reside in multiple positions in various Prx family members, leading to the addition of the "atypical 2-Cys Prx" category (Prxs for which a CR is present, but not in the "typical", originally identified position). Family members are now recognized to fall into six classes or subgroups by sequence/structure similarity, designated as AhpC/Prx1 (essentially synonymous with "typical 2-Cys"; alkyl hydroperoxide reductase C), Prx5, Prx6, PrxQ/BCP (bacterioferritin comigratory protein), Tpx (thiol peroxidase) and AhpE (alkyl hydroperoxide reductase E) groups. It is now recognized that the existence and location of CR across all 6 groups is heterogeneous. Thus, even though the "1-Cys Prx" designation was originally associated with the Prx6 group based on the lack of a CR in human PrxVI, and many Prx6 group members appear not to have a CR, there are "1-Cys" members in all of the subgroups. Moreover, the CR can be located in 5 (known) locations in the structure, yielding either an intersubunit or intrasubunit disulfide bond in the oxidized protein (depending on CR location). To assist with identification of new members and the subgroup to which they belong, a searchable database (the
PeroxiRedoxin classification indEX) including Prx sequences identified from GenBank (January 2008 through October 2011) was generated by bioinformatics analysis and is publicly available.
Peroxiredoxin-like Mammals also have so-called "peroxiredoxin-like" genes (). In humans there are three with the symbols
PRXL2A,
PRXL2B,
PRXL2C. These are actually selenium-free
orthologs of
selenoprotein U, where the
selenocysteine found in the version in fishes and birds is replaced with cysteine. The replacement happens to result in a CxxC pattern similar to peroxiredoxin. == Catalytic cycle ==