SelR reverses Mical-mediated oxidation of actin to regulate F-actin dynamics

RJ Hung, CS Spaeth, HG Yesilyurt, JR Terman - Nature cell biology, 2013 - nature.com
RJ Hung, CS Spaeth, HG Yesilyurt, JR Terman
Nature cell biology, 2013nature.com
Actin's polymerization properties are markedly altered by oxidation of its conserved Met 44
residue. Mediating this effect is a specific oxidation–reduction (redox) enzyme, Mical, that
works with Semaphorin repulsive guidance cues and selectively oxidizes Met 44. We now
find that this actin-regulatory process is reversible. Employing a genetic approach, we
identified a specific methionine sulfoxide reductase (MsrB) enzyme SelR that opposes Mical
redox activity and Semaphorin–Plexin repulsion to direct multiple actin-dependent cellular …
Abstract
Actin’s polymerization properties are markedly altered by oxidation of its conserved Met 44 residue. Mediating this effect is a specific oxidation–reduction (redox) enzyme, Mical, that works with Semaphorin repulsive guidance cues and selectively oxidizes Met 44. We now find that this actin-regulatory process is reversible. Employing a genetic approach, we identified a specific methionine sulfoxide reductase (MsrB) enzyme SelR that opposes Mical redox activity and Semaphorin–Plexin repulsion to direct multiple actin-dependent cellular behaviours in vivo. SelR specifically catalyses the reduction of the R isomer of methionine sulfoxide (methionine-R-sulfoxide) to methionine, and we found that SelR directly reduced Mical-oxidized actin, restoring its normal polymerization properties. These results indicate that Mical oxidizes actin stereospecifically to generate actin Met-44-R-sulfoxide (actinMet(R)O−44), and also implicate the interconversion of specific Met/Met(R)O residues as a precise means to modulate protein function. Our results therefore uncover a specific reversible redox actin regulatory system that controls cell and developmental biology.
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