About: Bacillithiol is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 102 publications have been published within this topic receiving 4163 citations. The topic is also known as: Cys-GlcN-mal & BSH.
TL;DR: Glutathione and soluble thiol content were examined in a broad spectrum of bacteria and the glutathione content of Escherichia coli increased significantly during transition from exponential to stationary phase.
Abstract: Glutathione and soluble thiol content were examined in a broad spectrum of bacteria. Significant soluble thiol was present in all cases. The thiol compound was glutathione in most of the gram-negative bacteria but not in most of the gram-positive bacteria studied. Glutathione was absent in four anerobes and one microaerophile but was present in a blue-green bacterium. The glutathione content of Escherichia coli increased significantly during transition from exponential to stationary phase.
TL;DR: This review summarizes the biosynthesis and function of glutathione in bacteria from physiological and biotechnological standpoints.
Abstract: Glutathione is one of the most abundant thiols present in cyanobacteria and proteobacteria, and in all mitochondria or chloroplast-bearing eukaryotes. In bacteria, in addition to its key role in maintaining the proper oxidation state of protein thiols, glutathione also serves a key function in protecting the cell from the action of low pH, chlorine compounds, and oxidative and osmotic stresses. Moreover, glutathione has emerged as a posttranslational regulator of protein function under conditions of oxidative stress, by the direct modification of proteins via glutathionylation. This review summarizes the biosynthesis and function of glutathione in bacteria from physiological and biotechnological standpoints.
TL;DR: An overview of the best-understood examples of thiol-based redox switches that affect gene expression is provided and reveals a remarkable range of chemical modifications exploited by Cys residues to effect changes in gene expression.
Abstract: Cysteine is notable among the universal, proteinogenic amino acids for its facile redox chemistry. Cysteine thiolates are readily modified by reactive oxygen species (ROS), reactive electrophilic species (RES), and reactive nitrogen species (RNS). Although thiol switches are commonly triggered by disulfide bond formation, they can also be controlled by S-thiolation, S-alkylation, or modification by RNS. Thiol-based switches are common in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms and activate functions that detoxify reactive species and restore thiol homeostasis while repressing functions that would be deleterious if expressed under oxidizing conditions. Here, we provide an overview of the best-understood examples of thiol-based redox switches that affect gene expression. Intra- or intermolecular disulfide bond formation serves as a direct regulatory switch for several bacterial transcription factors (OxyR, OhrR/2-Cys, Spx, YodB, CrtJ, and CprK) and indirectly regulates others (the RsrA anti-σ factor and RegB sensory histidine kinase). In eukaryotes, thiol-based switches control the yeast Yap1p transcription factor, the Nrf2/Keap1 electrophile and oxidative stress response, and the Chlamydomonas NAB1 translational repressor. Collectively, these regulators reveal a remarkable range of chemical modifications exploited by Cys residues to effect changes in gene expression.
TL;DR: Bacillithiol is the α-anomeric glycoside of l-cysteinyl-d-glucosamine with l-malic acid and likely functions as an antioxidant and may serve as a substitute for glutathione.
Abstract: Glutathione is a nearly ubiquitous, low-molecular-mass thiol and antioxidant, but it is conspicuously absent from most Gram-positive bacteria. We identify here the structure of bacillithiol, a newly described and abundant thiol produced by Bacillus species, Staphylococcus aureus and Deinococcus radiodurans. Bacillithiol is the α-anomeric glycoside of L-cysteinyl-D-glucosamine with L-malic acid and most probably functions as an antioxidant. Bacillithiol, like the structurally similar mycothiol, may serve as a substitute for glutathione.