Mustard gas crosslinking of proteins through preferential alkylation of cysteines
by Byrne, Michael P.; Broomfield, Clarence A.; Stites, Wesley E.
Mustard gas, bis(2-chloroethyl)sulfide, treatment of proteins is shown to generate significant amounts of covalently crosslinked protein dimers. This is due to the preferential alkylation of cysteine residues. Crosslinking does not occur in the model protein staphylococcal nuclease, which has no cysteine residues. Treatment of cysteine-containing mutants of staphylococcal nuclease with this chemical warfare agent did result in crosslinking. However, these dimers are slowly cleaved back to monomers by an unknown mechanism. The alkylation and crosslinking of cysteine-containing proteins by mustard gas may contribute to its toxicity.
- Journal
- Journal of Protein Chemistry
- Volume
- 15
- Issue
- 2
- Year
- 1996
- Start Page
- 131-136
- URL
- https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf01887394
- ISBN/ISSN
- 0277-8033
- DOI
- 10.1007/bf01887394