Animal glutamate–cysteine ligase Animal glutamate cysteine ligase (GCL) is a
heterodimeric enzyme composed of two
protein subunits that are coded by independent genes located on separate chromosomes: • Glutamate cysteine ligase catalytic subunit (
GCLC, ~73 kDa) possesses all of substrate and cofactor binding sites and is responsible for all of the catalysis. • Glutamate cysteine ligase modifier subunit (
GCLM, ~31 kDa) has no enzymatic activity on its own but increases the catalytic efficiency of GCLC when complexed in the holoenzyme. In the majority of cells and tissues, the expression of GCLM protein is lower than GCLC and GCLM is therefore limiting in the formation of the holoenzyme complex. Thus, the sum total of cellular GCL activity is equal to the activity of the holoenzyme + the activity of the remaining monomeric GCLC. composed of a catalytic and a modulatory subunit. The catalytic subunit is necessary and sufficient for all GCL enzymatic activity, whereas the modulatory subunit increases the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme. Mice lacking the catalytic subunit (i.e., lacking all
de novo GSH synthesis) die before birth. Mice lacking the modulatory subunit demonstrate no obvious phenotype, but exhibit marked decrease in GSH and increased sensitivity to toxic insults.
Plant glutamate cysteine ligase The plant glutamate cysteine ligase is a redox-sensitive
homodimeric enzyme, conserved in the plant kingdom. In an oxidizing environment, intermolecular disulfide bridges are formed and the enzyme switches to the dimeric active state. The midpoint potential of the critical cysteine pair is -318 mV. In addition to the redox-dependent control, the plant GCL enzyme is feedback inhibited by glutathione. GCL is exclusively located in
plastids, and
glutathione synthetase (GS) is dual-targeted to plastids and cytosol, thus GSH and
gamma-glutamylcysteine are exported from the plastids. Studies also shown that restricting GCL activity to the cytosol or glutathione biosynthesis to the plastids is sufficient for normal plant development and stress tolerance. Both glutathione biosynthesis enzymes are essential in plants; knock-outs of GCL and GS are lethal to embryo and seedling, respectively. As of late 2007, six
structures have been solved for this class of enzymes, with
PDB accession codes , , , , , and . ==References==