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Merck

Identification, expression pattern, and characterization of mouse glutaredoxin 2 isoforms.

Antioxidants & redox signaling (2008-08-19)
Christoph Hudemann, Maria Elisabet Lönn, José Rodrigo Godoy, Farnaz Zahedi Avval, Francisco Capani, Arne Holmgren, Christopher Horst Lillig
RESUMEN

Glutaredoxin 2 (Grx2) is a glutathione-dependent oxidoreductase involved in the maintenance of mitochondrial redox homeostasis. Grx2 was first characterized as mitochondrial protein, but alternative mRNA variants lacking the transit peptide-encoding first exon were demonstrated for human and proposed for mouse. We systematically screened for alternative transcript variants of mouse Grx2. We identified a total of six exons, three constitutive (II, III, and IV), two alternative first exons (exons Ia and Ic), and one single-cassette exon (exon IIIb) located between exons III and IV. Exons Ic and IIIb are not present in the human genome; mice lack human exon Ib. The six exons give rise to five transcript variants that encode three protein isoforms: mitochondrial Grx2a, a cytosolic isoform that is homologous to the cytosolic/nuclear human Grx2c and present in specific cells of many tissues and the testis-specific isoform Grx2d that is unique to mice. Mouse Grx2c can form an iron/sulfur cluster-bridged dimer, is enzymatically active as a monomer, and can donate electrons to ribonucleotide reductase. Testicular cells lack mitochondrial Grx2a but contain cytosolic Grx2. Prominent immunostaining was detected in spermatogonia and spermatids. These results provide evidence for additional functions of Grx2 in the cytosol, in cell proliferation, and in cellular differentiation.