It worked well for me, on the selenium edge. Back-soaking out the remaining
cacodylate was necessary to find the sites.

Choe's group have used this fruitfully:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Search&db=pubmed&term=greenwald+butler+choe&tool=fuzzy&ot=Greenwald+Bultler+Choe

Meignan et al propose a reaction mechanism, involving an As(+3)-thiolate
intermediate ((CH3) 2AsSR), which then reacts with free cysteines by thiol
exchange:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed&term=9735293&doptcmdl=Citation


Mark

On 13/04/07, Martyn Symmons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Dear John
         I think this is a thiol-specific reaction - where it has happened
to Cys residues the Met residues appear normal. I wondered if anyone had
ever used this on purpose as a heavy atom derivative. Arsenic has quite a
good anomalous signal too I think.
          All the best
              Martyn

Martyn Symmons
Department of Pathology
University of Cambridge



========================================
Message Received: Apr 13 2007, 01:37 PM
From: "John Walker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] oxidised cys

Can methionine be modified with these two reagents in a similar manner?

Cheers,

John

--
John R. Walker, Ph.D.
Structural Genomics Consortium
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario
Canada

On 4/13/07, Martyn Symmons <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote:
> A possible modification for cysteine that adds extra density is
S-(dimethylarsenic) cysteine (CAS). Requires DTT and cacodylate buffer
conditions however. And does not crosslink so far as I know.
>
> Has been seen in a number of structures from cacodylate conditions - eg.
one of the Xrcc4 structures
>
> cheers
>           Martyn
>
> Martyn Symmons
> Department of Pathology
> University of Cambridge
>
>
>
>
> ========================================
>  Message Received: Apr 12 2007, 06:06 PM
>  From: "Flip Hoedemaeker" < [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Cc:
>  Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] oxidised cys
>
>  I've actually seen something like this on disulfides (or at least I
think
>  so, I havent seen your density obviously), turned out it was model bias
in
>  MR, if I used a different template for MR the feature went away. This
was
>  high resolution stuff (~1.0 Å).
>
>  Flip
>
>  -----Original Message-----
>  From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
>   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2007 20:44
>  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] oxidised cys
>
>  Hi Stefano,
>
>  How certain are you that this link is truly what you think it is? If I
>  understand what you're saying - you want to create a (thioperoxythio)
link
>  - this chemistry should be hideously unstable. Can you explain this
using
>  disorder, or perhaps the residual density is a symmetry artifact?
>
>  Regards,
>
>  Artem
>
>  > Dear all
>  > in my structure I think I can see an oxidised Cys in cys-SO. Refining

>  > cys-SO
>  > I observe a residual density between the oxigen of one oxidised cys
and
>  > the
>  > one of the other molecule in AU.
>  > I'd like to try to refine it as cys-SO-OS-cys. I didn't find an
example of
>  > it in the pdb database. Could anyone tell me whether there are other
>  > cases?
>  > I guess I just didn't find them.
>  > Second question:
>  > How could I "explain" to refmac that there is the OO bond?
>  > I tried to write a line similar to the one for SSBOND in the pdb
header
>  > OOBOND   1 CEA A   42    CEA D   42
>  > but refmac couldn't care less...
>  >
>  > thanks in advance
>  >
>  > Stefano
>  >
>  > _________________________________________________________________
>  > Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today it's
FREE!
>  > http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/
>  >
>
>




--
Mark BROOKS
Telephone: 0169157968
Fax: 0169853715
INSTITUT de BIOCHIMIE et de BIOPHYSIQUE MOLECULAIRE et CELLULAIRE
UMR8619 - Bât 430 - Université de Paris-Sud
91405 ORSAY CEDEX

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