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A Quantitative Tissue-Specific Landscape of Protein Redox Regulation during Aging
Author(s) -
Haopeng Xiao,
Mark P. Jedrychowski,
Devin K. Schweppe,
Edward L. Huttlin,
Qing Yu,
David E. Heppner,
Jiaming Li,
Jiani Long,
Evanna L. Mills,
John Szpyt,
Zhixiang He,
Guangyan Du,
Ryan Garrity,
Anita Reddy,
Laura Pontano Vaites,
João A. Paulo,
Tinghu Zhang,
Nathanael S. Gray,
Steven P. Gygi,
Edward T. Chouchani
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2020.02.012
Subject(s) - biology , redox , microbiology and biotechnology , cysteine , proteome , reactive oxygen species , biochemistry , chemistry , enzyme , organic chemistry
Mammalian tissues engage in specialized physiology that is regulated through reversible modification of protein cysteine residues by reactive oxygen species (ROS). ROS regulate a myriad of biological processes, but the protein targets of ROS modification that drive tissue-specific physiology in vivo are largely unknown. Here, we develop Oximouse, a comprehensive and quantitative mapping of the mouse cysteine redox proteome in vivo. We use Oximouse to establish several paradigms of physiological redox signaling. We define and validate cysteine redox networks within each tissue that are tissue selective and underlie tissue-specific biology. We describe a common mechanism for encoding cysteine redox sensitivity by electrostatic gating. Moreover, we comprehensively identify redox-modified disease networks that remodel in aged mice, establishing a systemic molecular basis for the long-standing proposed links between redox dysregulation and tissue aging. We provide the Oximouse compendium as a framework for understanding mechanisms of redox regulation in physiology and aging.

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