Review articleOxidation of methionyl residues in proteins: Tools, targets, and reversal☆
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Walther Vogt studied medicine and received his M.D. degree at Munich University. His scientific career started in 1945 in the Institute of Pharmacology, Frankfurt University. In 1956 he worked in the National Institute for Medical Research, London. Since 1965 he has been a Scientific Member of the Max Planck Society; from 1968 till 1986 he was Head of the Department of Biochemical Pharmacology, Max Planck Institute for Experimental Medicine in Göttingen. Dr. Vogt retired in 1986. His research into agents stimulating smooth muscle led to the discovery of “Darmstoff,” later identified as the first prostaglandin ouside the urogenital system. In the 1960s he purified “anaphylatoxin” and characterized it as a peptide. Studies on its release prompted the analysis the alternative pathway of the complement system; the composition and assembly of the complex C3/C5 convertase was found. More recently he observed that C5 can also be activated nonenzymically, by methionine oxidation.