Yes in auto-oxidation I'm referring to metal-ion catalyzed oxidation of thiols by molecular oxygen. EGT has a standard reduction potential of -0.06V compared to -0.24V for the GSH-GSSG redox couple. Also the thiol pKa of EGT is ~10.8 compared to 8.9 for GSH.
I'm not interested in thermodynamics or kinetics of the oxidation of the two thiols per se, but am trying to come up with an explanation as to why EGT is considered to be more resistant/stable to metal ion catalysed oxidation. And what this can mean about the general antioxidant function of EGT. (As you can tell, I'm more interested in a biologically relevant explanation, as that's my background and research area). But if the process requires an examination of thermodynamic stability of the two thiols, I'm interested in doing so.
I thought about the thermodynamics angle before, but my knowledge of chemistry wasn't sufficient to integrate the reduction potential values, the pKa, and the tautomerism of EGT into one consistent explanation on the increased stability of EGT. Does the thione tautomerism of EGT make reaching the thiolate intermediate harder (compared to thiolate from thiol isomer), and this increases the reduction potential compared to GSH? Or is the increased reduction potential a separate attribute of EGT unrelated to its tautomerism? Similarly, I'm not sure how the higher pka of EGT ties in. Higher pKa indicates a lesser willingness of the EGT thiol to deprotonate to the thiolate, and I guess this is because the thione tautomer generally predominates, which is not able to able to deprotonate to the thiolate unlike the thiol form? Does that mean the higher pKa is directly linked to the tautomerism, and also to the increased reduction potential, or again, are they separate attributes?
Regarding you comment on kinetics, I'm not sure about it, as I haven't seen kinetic parameters generally in the review papers I've read of thiols (its generally the pKa and reduction potential that's the focus). Happy to hear any further details on this angle though.