Mitochondrially encoded methionine is inversely related to longevity in mammals.

نویسندگان

  • Juan Carlos Aledo
  • Yang Li
  • João Pedro de Magalhães
  • Manuel Ruíz-Camacho
  • Juan Antonio Pérez-Claros
چکیده

Methionine residues in proteins react readily with reactive oxygen species making them particularly sensitive to oxidation. However, because oxidized methionine can be reduced back in a catalyzed reaction, it has been suggested that methionine residues act as oxidant scavengers, protecting not only the proteins where they are located but also the surrounding macromolecules. To investigate whether methionine residues may be selected for or against animal longevity, we carried out a meta-examination of mitochondrial genomes from mammalian species. Our analyses unveiled a hitherto unnoticed observation: mitochondrially encoded polypeptides from short-lived species are enriched in methionine when compared with their long-lived counterparts. We show evidence suggesting that methionine addition to proteins in short-lived species, rather than methionine loss from proteins in long-lived species, is behind the reported difference in methionine usage. The inverse association between longevity and methionine, which persisted after correction for body mass and phylogenetic interdependence, was paralleled by the methionine codon AUA, but not by the codon AUG. Although nuclear encoded mitochondrial polypeptides exhibited higher methionine usage than nonmitochondrial proteins, correlation with longevity was only found within the group of those polypeptides located in the inner mitochondrial membrane. Based on these results, we propose that short-lived animals subjected to higher oxidative stress selectively accumulate methionine in their mitochondrially encoded proteins, which supports the role of oxidative damage in aging.

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Aging cell

دوره 10 2  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2011