Abstract

Chemical modification of tryptophan residues in abrin-a with N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) was studied with regard to saccharide-binding. The number of tryptophan residues available for NBS oxidation increased with lowering pH, and 11 out of the 13 tryptophan residues in abrin-a were eventually modified with NBS at pH 4.0, while 6 tryptophan residues were modified at pH 6.0 in the absence of specific saccharides. Modification of tryptophan residues at pH 6.0 greatly decreased the saccharide-binding ability of abrin-a, and only 2% of the hemagglutinating activity was retained after modification of 3 residues/mol. When the modification was done in the presence of lactose or galactose, 1 out of 3 residues/mol remained unmodified with a retention of a fairly high hemagglutinating activity. However, GalNAc did not show such a protective effect. NBS-oxidation led to a great loss of the fluorescence of abrin-a, and after modification of 3 tryptophan residues/mol, the fluorescence intensity at 345 nm was only 38% of t...

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