The hypothesis of common epitopes in corrinoid-dependent enzymes was tested by a monospecific polyclonal antiserum against the 33 kDa corrinoid-containing membrane protein from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Marburg. Cross-reaction was detected with the 33 kDa and the 31 kDa subunits of the corrinoid-containing enriched 5-methyl-H4MPT: 5-hydroxybenzimidazolyl cobamide methyltransferase from the cytoplasmic fraction and a 33 kDa protein from the membrane fraction of Methanobacterium thermoauto-trophicum ΔH. This indicates that both proteins have similar antigenic determinants and that they may have similar function as methyltransfer proteins. Also a soluble 20 kDa protein of yet unknown function from Clostridium barkeri cross-reacted with the antiserum. No cross-reactions were observed with the purified corrinoid-containing 2-methyleneglutarate mutase from C. barkeri, the corrinoid/iron-sulfur protein from C. thermoaceticum, the carbon monoxide dehydrogenases from C. thermoaceticum and Methanothrix soehngenii, and the corrinoid-binding protein intrinsic factor from porcine gastric mucosa. Also cell extracts from the corrinoid-rich bacteria Sporomusa ovata, Methanolobus tindarius, Chloroflexus aurantiacus, Propionibacterium shermanii, the membrane fraction and the cytoplasmic fraction of Methanococcus voltae or extracts from human liver, contained no antibody combining sites others than with the preimmunological serum. These findings indicate, that many corrinoid-containing proteins from bacteria have no common antigenic determinants.