| Literature DB >> 34936330 |
Hae Min Lee1, Dong Wook Choi2, Seahyun Kim1, Aro Lee1, Minseo Kim1, Yeon Jin Roh1, Young Ho Jo1, Hwa Yeon Cho1, Ho-Jae Lee1, Seung-Rock Lee3, Lionel Tarrago4, Vadim N Gladyshev5, Ji Hyung Kim1, Byung Cheon Lee1.
Abstract
Methionine oxidation is involved in regulating the protein activity and often leads to protein malfunction. However, tools for quantitative analyses of protein-specific methionine oxidation are currently unavailable. In this work, we developed a biological sensor that quantifies oxidized methionine in the form of methionine-R-sulfoxide in target proteins. The biosensor "tpMetROG" consists of methionine sulfoxide reductase B (MsrB), circularly permuted yellow fluorescent protein (cpYFP), thioredoxin, and protein G. Protein G binds to the constant region of antibodies against target proteins, specifically capturing them. Then, MsrB reduces the oxidized methionine in these proteins, leading to cpYFP fluorescence changes. We assessed this biosensor for quantitative analysis of methionine-R-sulfoxide in various proteins, such as calmodulin, IDLO, LegP, Sacde, and actin. We further developed an immunosorbent assay using the biosensor to quantify methionine oxidation in specific proteins such as calmodulin in animal tissues. The biosensor-linked immunosorbent assay proves to be an indispensable tool for detecting methionine oxidation in a protein-specific manner. This is a versatile tool for studying the redox biology of methionine oxidation in proteins.Entities:
Keywords: biosensor; immunosorbent assay; methionine oxidation; methionine sulfoxide reductase B; redox
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34936330 DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.1c01819
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Sens ISSN: 2379-3694 Impact factor: 7.711