Publication | Open Access
Quantitative identification of N-terminal amino acids in proteins by radiolabeled reductive methylation and amino acid analysis: Application to human erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase
42
Citations
14
References
1985
Year
A novel method of determining N-terminal amino acids in proteins is introduced. Reductive methylation of a protein with radiolabeled formaldehyde methylates both the alpha-amino group of the N-terminal amino acid and the epsilon-amino groups of Lys residues. The radiomethylated amino acids are stable to acid hydrolysis, and each of 16 possible hydrolysis-stable N-terminal amino acids can be identified by the unique elution positions of its N alpha-methyl and N alpha,N alpha-dimethyl derivatives with an appropriate amino acid analyzer elution schedule. The technique is at least as sensitive as other N-terminal amino acid determinations and, in addition, permits a quantitative evaluation of the number of N-terminal groups in a sample. Reductive methylation of bovine serum albumin revealed N-terminal Asp at a stoichiometry of 0.97 amino acid residue per polypeptide, while methylation of prolactin resulted in 0.86 residue of N-terminal Thr per polypeptide. Human erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase contained two N-terminal amino acids with stoichiometries of 0.66 Glu and 0.34 Arg per 70-kDa subunit. Identification of Glu as the principal N-terminus of acetylcholinesterase was confirmed by Edman sequencing.
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