In most living cells, redox homeostasis is based both on the glutathione and the thioredoxin system. In the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum antioxidative proteins represent promising targets for the development of antiparasitic drugs. We cloned and expressed a thioredoxin of P. falciparum (pftrx), and we improved the stable expression of the thioredoxin reductase (PfTrxR) of the parasite by multiple silent mutagenesis. Both proteins were biochemically characterized and compared with the human host thioredoxin system. Intriguingly, the 13-kDa protein PfTrx is a better substrate for human TrxR (K m ؍ 2 M, k cat ؍ 3300 min ؊1 ) than for P. falciparum TrxR (K m ؍ 10.4 M, k cat ؍ 3100 min ؊1 ). Possessing a midpoint potential of ؊270 mV, PfTrx was found to reduce the disease-related metabolites S-nitrosoglutathione and GSSG. The rate constant k 2 for the reaction between reduced P. falciparum thioredoxin and GSSG was determined to be 0.039 M ؊1 min ؊1 at 25°C and pH 7.4. The k 2 for thioredoxins from man, Drosophila melanogaster, and Escherichia coli was ϳ5 times lower. Our data suggest that GSSG reduction can be supported at a high rate by the TrxR/Trx system in glutathione reductase-deficient cells; this may be relevant for certain stages of the malarial parasite but also for cells containing high [GSSG] of other organisms like dormant forms of Neurospora, glutathione reductasedeficient yeast mutants, or CD4 ؉ lymphocytes of AIDS patients.