Since the classical work of Porter (1959), which defined the Fab and Fc regions of the IgG molecule, proteolytic cleavage has been widely adopted as a basic method in the localization and characterization of immunoglobulin effector sites [see, for example, Stanworth & Stewart (1976) and Stanworth & Turner (1978)]. This approach has been extended by use of other types of protease and cyanogen bromide. which cleaves only at methionine residues and thus provides a relatively small number of fragments (as is depicted in Fig. 1. which summarizes the results of application of these methods in my own laboratory to the cleavage of IgG. in studies aimed at delineating the site of rheumatoid factor (RF) and protein A reactivity). Application of similar methods to the cleavage of human myeloma IgE enabled us to obtain the first evidence that the mast cell site is located in the Fc region of the reaginic antibody molecule (Stanworth et al., 1968). There is, however, a limitation to the extent to which this approach can be applied owing, in some instances, to the sacrifice of the active site, either as a result of its direct dissociation or as a consequence of a conformational change originating in another part of the immunoglobulin polypeptide chain. This problem has been encountered in our attempts to characterize the auto-antigenic site on the IgG molecule against which the socalled ‘general’ RF reactivity is directed. The lack of RF reactivity shown by the pF’ peptic cleavage fragment (comprising the rabbit C;.3 domain) suggested that auto-antigenic activity would be found to be associated with a C;.2 domain site. Surprisingly, however, neither the Facb nor the pF’ fragments produced by plasmin cleavage of rabbit IgG showed reactivity with rheumatoid factor (Stewart et al., 1973); nor, interestingly, with the bacterial cell wall constituent protein A (Stewart et al., 1978). Significantly, circular dichroism studies on the proteoytic cleavage products indicated an interaction between the C,.2 and C.,3 domains of rabbit IgG (Stewart et al., 1977), which has also been revealed by X-ray crystallographic analysis, which has provided important independent evidence that protein A binds to sites within both the C;.2 and C;.3 domains of the human IgG molecule (Deisenhofer et al., 1978). This would seem, therefore, to offer an explanation for our failure to further exploit successfully Fc subfragmentation procedures, in attempts to locate more precisely the positions of the autoantigenic and protein A reactive sites. As, however, will be indicated in the next section, we have gone closer to achieving this goal by resort to the alternative strategy of synthesizing peptides which are supposedly representative of sequences comprising the Fc effector sites.