We report here that in vitro exposure of monomeric
actin to hydrogen peroxide leads to a conversion of 6 of
the 16 methionine residues to methionine sulfoxide residues.
Although the initial effect of H2O2
on actin is the oxidation of Cys374, we have found that
Met44, Met47, Met176, Met190, Met269, and Met355 are the
other sites of the oxidative modification. Met44 and Met47
are the methionyl sites first oxidized. The methionine
residues that are oxidized are not simply related to their
accessibility to the external medium and are found in all
four subdomains of actin. The conformations of subdomain
1, a region critical for the functional binding of different
actin-binding proteins, and subdomain 2, which plays important
roles in the polymerization process and stabilization of
the actin filament, are changed upon oxidation. The conformational
changes are deduced from the increased exposure of hydrophobic
residues, which correlates with methionine sulfoxide formation,
from the perturbations in tryptophan fluorescence, and
from the decreased susceptibility to limited proteolysis
of oxidized actin.