The high-resolution structure of bovine trypsin inhibited with DFP † † Abbreviations used: DFP, diisopropyl fluorophosphate; DIP, diisopropyl phosphoryl; DIP-trypsin, diisopropyl fluorophosphate-inhibited trypsin; BA-trypsin, benzamidine-inhibited trypsin. In equations the latter are further abbreviated to BAT and DIPT. The amino acid abbreviations follow standard convention, and the amino acid residue numbering is that adopted by Stroud et al. (1971). was determined by Stroud et al. (1971 and R. M. Stroud, L. M. Kay, A. Cooper & R. E. Dickerson, Abstr. 8th Int. Congr. Biochem. 1970). The experiments reported here were designed to study the specific side-chain binding pocket of trypsin using benzamidine, which is a competitive, specific inhibitor of trypsin. High-resolution electron density syntheses and difference syntheses unambiguously identify the side-chain binding pocket, which normally recognizes and binds the side chains of arginine or lysine during proteolysis. Several important conformational differences in the protein structure are apparent between DIP- and BA-trypsins, and these are discussed with particular reference to inhibition, the binding of lysine and arginine, subsequent orientation of the target at the active site, and the enhancement of tryptic activity towards non-specific substrates seen on binding small alkyl amines or guanidines in the specific binding pocket. The BA-trypsin structure provides a good model for the binding of real substrate side chains to trypsin during catalysis, explaining the sharp trypsin specificity for lysine or arginine side chains (Weinstein & Doolittle, 1972) and the lack of specificity for stereochemically different basic side chains. Benzamidine is shown to inhibit trypsin by steric interference with the inferred position of good substrates, even when they do not carry any side chain. Apart from the substitution of benzamidine and DIP, the most significant differences between DIP-trypsin and BA-trypsin involve complete repositioning of the side chain of Gln192, alterations in the side chains of Asp102, His57 and Ser195 at the active site, and changes in the solvent structure around this region. The carboxyl group of Asp189, which is responsible for trypsin specificity, shows no movement on binding benzamidine. The amidinium cation of benzamidine forms a salt bridge with Asp189 in BA-trypsin; a similar salt bridge can be constructed between the side chains of model substrates with lysyl or arginyl side chains and Aspl89. The γ-oxygen of Ser190 is displaced by a 120 ° rotation about its αβ bond on binding benzamidine and the binding pocket closes to sandwich the inhibitor ring between the peptide planes of 190–191 and 215–216. These contacts are presumably found in the enzyme-substrate complex with specific substrates. The active site structure at pH 8.0 is discussed with particular reference to the microscopic p K a values of Asp102 and His57, the p K a of the Asp-His system, and the mechanistic consequences of these assignments.