Authors
Matthew A Ciorba, Stefan H Heinemann, Herbert Weissbach, Nathan Brot, Toshinori Hoshi
Publication date
1997/9/2
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
94
Issue
18
Pages
9932-9937
Publisher
The National Academy of Sciences of the USA
Description
Oxidation of amino acid residues in proteins can be caused by a variety of oxidizing agents normally produced by cells. The oxidation of methionine in proteins to methionine sulfoxide is implicated in aging as well as in pathological conditions, and it is a reversible reaction mediated by a ubiquitous enzyme, peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase. The reversibility of methionine oxidation suggests that it could act as a cellular regulatory mechanism although no such in vivo activity has been demonstrated. We show here that oxidation of a methionine residue in a voltage-dependent potassium channel modulates its inactivation. When this methionine residue is oxidized to methionine sulfoxide, the inactivation is disrupted, and it is reversed by coexpression with peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase. The results suggest that oxidation and reduction of methionine could play a dynamic role in the cellular signal …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MA Ciorba, SH Heinemann, H Weissbach, N Brot… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997