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. 1982;35(2):125-35.
doi: 10.1071/bi9820125.

Carboxymethylation of thiol groups in ovalbumin: implications for proteins that contain both thiol and disulfide groups

Carboxymethylation of thiol groups in ovalbumin: implications for proteins that contain both thiol and disulfide groups

D M Webster et al. Aust J Biol Sci. 1982.

Abstract

The cysteine residues of hen ovalbumin were S-carboxymethylated with non-radioactive iodoacetic acid under various conditions by altering the pH at which the protein was denatured in 8 M urea, by using different molar ratios of non-radioactive iodoacetic acid to cysteine and by varying the time at which carboxymethylation was commenced after denaturing conditions had been applied. Under the various conditions, the thiol groups were carboxymethylated to different extents, the residual thiol groups being measured by reaction with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. When ovalbumin is carboxymethylated in alkaline urea, it unfolds slowly and the carboxymethylation is incomplete even with 150-fold excess iodoacetic acid. The known rapid thiol-disulfide exchange that occurs at alkaline pH values makes this method of carboxymethylation unsuitable as a preliminary step for blocking the native cysteine residues of ovalbumin before reduction and labelling the thiol groups formed by reduction of the disulfide bonds. Titration of the thiol groups of ovalbumin in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride or 1% (w/v) sodium dodecyl sulfate at pH 8.2 with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) is more rapid than in 8 M urea and these solvents would be preferable for studies of the disulfide-bonded sequences. Denaturation of ovalbumin in acidic 8 M urea is a very rapid process, and under mild acid conditions thiol-disulfide interchange is much slower. Subsequent carboxymethylation of the cysteine residues at alkaline pH with 150-fold excess iodoacetic acid results in complete carboxymethylation and the carboxymethylated ovalbumin can be reduced and labelled with radioactive iodoacetic acid with specific labelling of the half-cystine residues involved in the disulfide bond. The results are discussed in relation to the allocation of half-cystine residues in other protein systems that contain both thiol and disulfide groups.

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