Importance of Glutathione S-Transferases (GSTs): Mammalian GSTs have many prominent roles including:
- Detoxification of xenobiotics
 - Steroid metabolism
 - Prostaglandin biosynthesis
 - Cancer chemoprevention
 - Modulating oxidative stress by eliminating 4-hydroxynonenal
 
For these reasons GSTs are of significant interest to to a wide range of life scientists including pharmacologists, toxicologists, cell biologists. GSTs also play important roles in cellular signalling. As a group, GSTs metabolize a very wide range cancer chemotherapeutic agents, insecticides, herbicides and carcinogens.
GST families, classes and isoforms: There are three major families of GST proteins, which share some similarities in their three-dimensional topology but are only distantly related:
- Cytosolic GSTs, comprised of several classes including A, M, P, O, T, Z
 - Some of these classes are now known to include multiple isoforms with distinct tissue localizations and substrate specificities.
	
- Mitochondrial GSTs
 - Microsomal GSTs
 - Some members of this family play key roles in metabolism of endogenous substances, e.g. mPGE isomerase
 
 
We offer the largest commercial listing of GST proteins, antibodies and immunoassays:
- Over 20 purified GST enzymes.
 - Our recombinant enzymes have high purity and activity
 - Our purified GST proteins are useful for:
 - inhibition studies
 - metabolite generation
 - drug metabolism studies
 
Our rapidly expanding offerings of antibodies to GST isoforms is:
- The most highly characterized available – especially for specificty within and among classes
 - Suitable for Western blotting, IHC and ELISA
 
Our immunoassays for GST isoforms:
- Provide for facile quantification of GSTs in biological samples
 - Useful for studies of tissue-specific toxicity
 - Include recombinant standards
 
GST Products:
Key reviews on GSTs:
- Eaton DL, Bammler TK. “Concise review of the glutathione S-transferases and their significance to toxicology.” Toxicol Sci. 49:156-64 (1999).
 - Hayes JD, Flanagan JU, Jowsey IR. “Glutathione transferases.” Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol. 45:51-88 (2005).
 - Petra Jancovaa, Pavel Anzenbacherb, Eva Anzenbacherovaa “PHASE II DRUG METABOLIZING ENZYMES” Biomed Pap Med Fac Univ Palacky Olomouc Czech Repub. 154:103–116. (2010).
 - Kenneth D. Tew and Danyelle M. Townsend “Glutathione-S-Transferases As Determinants of Cell Survival and Death.” ANTIOXIDANTS & REDOX SIGNALING 17: 12, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc (2012).
 - Philip J. Sherratt and John D. Hayes “Glutathione S-transferases Enzyme Systems that Metabolise Drugs and Other Xenobiotics.” Edited by Costas Ioannides John Wiley & Sons Ltd. (2001)