PROSITE logo

PROSITE documentation PDOC00172
Thioredoxin family active site signature and domain profile


Description

Thioredoxins [1,2,3,4] are small proteins of approximately one hundred amino-acid residues which participate in various redox reactions via the reversible oxidation of an active center disulfide bond. They exist in either a reduced form or an oxidized form where the two cysteine residues are linked in an intramolecular disulfide bond. Thioredoxin is present in prokaryotes and eukaryotes and the sequence around the redox-active disulfide bond is well conserved. Bacteriophage T4 also encodes for a thioredoxin but its primary structure is not homologous to bacterial, plant and vertebrate thioredoxins.

A number of eukaryotic proteins contain domains evolutionary related to thioredoxin, most of them are protein disulfide isomerases (PDI). PDI (EC 5.3.4.1) [5,6,7] is an endoplasmic reticulum enzyme that catalyzes the rearrangement of disulfide bonds in various proteins. The various forms of PDI which are currently known are:

  • PDI major isozyme; a multifunctional protein that also function as the β subunit of prolyl 4-hydroxylase (EC 1.14.11.2), as a component of oligosaccharyl transferase (EC 2.4.1.119), as thyroxine deiodinase (EC 3.8. 1.4), as glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase (EC 1.8.4.2) and as a thyroid hormone-binding protein !
  • ERp60 (ER-60; 58 Kd microsomal protein). ERp60 was originally thought to be a phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C isozyme and later to be a protease.
  • ERp72.
  • P5.

All PDI contains two or three (ERp72) copies of the thioredoxin domain.

Bacterial proteins that act as thiol:disulfide interchange proteins that allows disulfide bond formation in some periplasmic proteins also contain a thioredoxin domain. These proteins are:

  • Escherichia coli dsbA (or prfA) and its orthologs in Vibrio cholerae (tcpG) and Haemophilus influenzae (por).
  • Escherichia coli dsbC (or xpRA) and its orthologs in Erwinia chrysanthemi and Haemophilus influenzae.
  • Escherichia coli dsbD (or dipZ) and its Haemophilus influenzae ortholog.
  • Escherichia coli dsbE (or ccmG) and orthologs in Haemophilus influenzae, Rhodobacter capsulatus (helX), Rhiziobiacae (cycY and tlpA).

The pattern we developed is directed against the two cysteines that form the redox-active bond. We also developed a profile that covers the whole domain.

Last update:

December 2007 / Profile added and text revised.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Technical section

PROSITE methods (with tools and information) covered by this documentation:

THIOREDOXIN_2, PS51352; Thioredoxin domain profile  (MATRIX)

THIOREDOXIN_1, PS00194; Thioredoxin family active site  (PATTERN)


References

1AuthorsHolmgren A.
TitleThioredoxin.
SourceAnnu. Rev. Biochem. 54:237-271(1985).
PubMed ID3896121
DOI10.1146/annurev.bi.54.070185.001321

2AuthorsGleason F.K. Holmgren A.
TitleThioredoxin and related proteins in procaryotes.
SourceFEMS Microbiol. Rev. 4:271-297(1988).
PubMed ID3152490

3AuthorsHolmgren A.
TitleThioredoxin and glutaredoxin systems.
SourceJ. Biol. Chem. 264:13963-13966(1989).
PubMed ID2668278

4AuthorsEklund H. Gleason F.K. Holmgren A.
TitleStructural and functional relations among thioredoxins of different species.
SourceProteins 11:13-28(1991).
PubMed ID1961698

5AuthorsFreedman R.B. Hawkins H.C. Murant S.J. Reid L.
TitleProtein disulphide-isomerase: a homologue of thioredoxin implicated in the biosynthesis of secretory proteins.
SourceBiochem. Soc. Trans. 16:96-99(1988).
PubMed ID3371540

6AuthorsKivirikko K.I. Myllyla R. Pihlajaniemi T.
TitleProtein hydroxylation: prolyl 4-hydroxylase, an enzyme with four cosubstrates and a multifunctional subunit.
SourceFASEB J. 3:1609-1617(1989).
PubMed ID2537773

7AuthorsFreedman R.B. Hirst T.R. Tuite M.F.
TitleProtein disulphide isomerase: building bridges in protein folding.
SourceTrends Biochem. Sci. 19:331-336(1994).
PubMed ID7940678



PROSITE is copyrighted by the SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) License, see prosite_license.html.

Miscellaneous

View entry in original PROSITE document format
View entry in raw text format (no links)