DETERMINATION OF CERTAIN AMINO ACIDS IN CHYMOTRYPSINOGEN, AND ITS MOLECULAR WEIGHT
Open Access
- 19 November 1941
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 25 (2), 167-176
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.25.2.167
Abstract
1. A preparation of chymotrypsinogen, obtained from Dr. M. Kunitz, was analyzed for sulfur, the sulfur amino acids, tyrosine, and tryptophane. 2. The protein sulfur of chymotrypsinogen was accounted for as methionine, cysteine, and cystine. 3. A method is presented for calculating the minimum molecular weight of a protein from the distribution of the sulfur amino acids. In the case of chymotrypsinogen, the calculated minimum molecular weight was found to be the actual molecular weight. 4. The molecular weight of chymotrypsinogen is 36,700 by amino acid analysis as compared to 36,000 by osmotic pressure measurements of Kunitz and Northrop. Chymotrypsinogen contains per mol 17 atoms of sulfur, 3 residues of methionine, 4 of cysteine, 10 of half-cystine (i.e. 5 S—S linkages), 6 of tyrosine, and 10 of tryptophane. 5. The tryptophane content of chymotrypsinogen (5.51 per cent) is the highest of any protein so far on record. 6. Chymotrypsinogen contains no reactive SH groups, although it yields cysteine on hydrolysis. This may be due either to preformed but unreactive SH groups or to S—X groups. The term S—X group is used to denote the substitution of the sulfhydryl hydrogen by a constituent X; hydrolysis yields SH groups: S—X + HOH = SH + X—OH.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- FORMATION OF NEW CRYSTALLINE ENZYMES FROM CHYMOTRYPSINThe Journal of general physiology, 1938
- Investigations of sources of error in the estimation of tyrosine and tryptophan in complex materials, which are associated with hydrolysisBiochemical Journal, 1938
- CRYSTALLINE CHYMO-TRYPSIN AND CHYMO-TRYPSINOGENThe Journal of general physiology, 1935
- Some sources of error in the estimation of cysteine and cystine in complex materials when acid hydrolysis is employedBiochemical Journal, 1933