4.7 Review

Regulated methionine oxidation by monooxygenases

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 109, Issue -, Pages 141-155

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2017.02.010

Keywords

MICAL; Methionine; Methionine oxidation; Methionine sulfoxide; Methionine sulfoxide reductase; Actin; Monooxygenase; DUF3585; Multidomain proteins; Scaffolding proteins; Redox signaling

Funding

  1. Pew Charitable Trust
  2. [NIH AG021518]
  3. [GM065603]

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Protein function can be regulated via post-translational modifications by numerous enzymatic and nonenzymatic mechanisms, including oxidation of cysteine and methionine residues. Redox-dependent regulatory mechanisms have been identified for nearly every cellular process, but the major paradigm has been that cellular components are oxidized (damaged) by reactive oxygen species (ROS) in a relatively unspecific way, and then reduced (repaired) by designated reductases. While this scheme may work with cysteine, it cannot be ascribed to other residues, such as methionine, whose reaction with ROS is too slow to be biologically relevant. However, methionine is clearly oxidized in vivo and enzymes for its stereoselective reduction are present in all three domains of life. Here, we revisit the chemistry and biology of methionine oxidation, with emphasis on its generation by enzymes from the monooxygenase family. Particular attention is placed on MICALs, a recently discovered family of proteins that harbor an unusual flavin-monooxygenase domain with an NADPH-dependent methionine sulfoxidase activity. Based on structural and kinetic information we provide a rational framework to explain MICAL mechanism, inhibition, and regulation. Methionine residues that are targeted by MICALs are reduced back by methionine sulfoxide reductases, suggesting that reversible methionine oxidation may be a general mechanism analogous to the regulation by phosphorylation by kinases/phosphatases. The identification of new enzymes that catalyze the oxidation of methionine will open a new area of research at the forefront of redox signaling.

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