Antioxidants, Vol. 12, Pages 843: Rhodanese-Fold Containing Proteins in Humans: Not Just Key Players in Sulfur Trafficking

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Antioxidants, Vol. 12, Pages 843: Rhodanese-Fold Containing Proteins in Humans: Not Just Key Players in Sulfur Trafficking

Antioxidants doi: 10.3390/antiox12040843

Authors: Razan Alsohaibani Anne-Lise Claudel Romain Perchat-Varlet Séverine Boutserin François Talfournier Sandrine Boschi-Muller Benjamin Selles

The Rhodanese-fold is a ubiquitous structural domain present in various protein subfamilies associated with different physiological functions or pathophysiological conditions in humans. Proteins harboring a Rhodanese domain are diverse in terms of domain architecture, with some representatives exhibiting one or several Rhodanese domains, fused or not to other structural domains. The most famous Rhodanese domains are catalytically active, thanks to an active-site loop containing an essential cysteine residue which allows for catalyzing sulfur transfer reactions involved in sulfur trafficking, hydrogen sulfide metabolism, biosynthesis of molybdenum cofactor, thio-modification of tRNAs or protein urmylation. In addition, they also catalyse phosphatase reactions linked to cell cycle regulation, and recent advances proposed a new role into tRNA hydroxylation, illustrating the catalytic versatility of Rhodanese domain. To date, no exhaustive analysis of Rhodanese containing protein equipment from humans is available. In this review, we focus on structural and biochemical properties of human-active Rhodanese-containing proteins, in order to provide a picture of their established or putative key roles in many essential biological functions.

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