Susceptibility of Protein Methionine Oxidation in Response to Hydrogen Peroxide Treatment–Ex Vivo versus In Vitro: A Computational Insight
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Abstract
Methionine oxidation plays a relevant role in cell signaling. Recently, we built a
database containing thousands of proteins identified as sulfoxidation targets. Using this resource,
we have now developed a computational approach aimed at characterizing the oxidation of human
methionyl residues. We found that proteins oxidized in both cell-free preparations (in vitro) and
inside living cells (ex vivo) were enriched in methionines and intrinsically disordered regions.
However, proteins oxidized ex vivo tended to be larger and less abundant than those oxidized in vitro.
Another distinctive feature was their subcellular localizations. Thus, nuclear and mitochondrial
proteins were preferentially oxidized ex vivo but not in vitro. The nodes corresponding with ex vivo
and in vitro oxidized proteins in a network based on gene ontology terms showed an assortative
mixing suggesting that ex vivo oxidized proteins shared among them molecular functions and
biological processes. This was further supported by the observation that proteins from the ex vivo
set were co-regulated more often than expected by chance. We also investigated the sequence
environment of oxidation sites. Glutamate and aspartate were overrepresented in these environments
regardless the group. In contrast, tyrosine, tryptophan and histidine were clearly avoided but only in
the environments of the ex vivo sites. A hypothetical mechanism of methionine oxidation accounts
for these observations presented.
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Aledo, J.C.; Aledo, P. Susceptibility of Protein Methionine Oxidation in Response to Hydrogen Peroxide Treatment–Ex Vivo Versus In Vitro: A Computational Insight. Antioxidants 2020, 9, 987. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox9100987










