Studies in fluorescence histochemistry. VII. The mechanism of the complex reactions that may take place between protein carboxyl groups and hot mixtures of acetic anhydride and pyridine in the acetic anhydride-salicylhydrazide-zinc (or fluorescent ketone) method for localizing protein C-terminal carboxyl groups

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 3 - Trang 127-141 - 1971
P. J. Stoward1,2, J. Burns1,2
1Department of Anatomy, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK
2Department of Pathology, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford

Tóm tắt

Theoretical arguments are marshalled with experimental evidence to support claims made previously (Stoward & Burns, 1967, 1968) that at 60°C acetic anhydride in the presence of pyridine transforms C-terminal carboxyl groups of proteins to methyl ketones and converts side-chain carboxyl groups to acid anhydrides. On balance the experimental evidence also supports another claim, namely that the methyl ketones thus formed from C-terminal carboxyl groups may be demonstrated specificallyin situ by the intense fluorescence they emit after treatment successively with aqueous solutions of salicylhydrazide and zinc acetate. The experiments carried out included ones favouring the exclusive formation of acid anhydrides, blocking of possible anhydrides with aromatic amines or alcohols, hydrolysis of anhydrides with alkalis, and prior methylation of carboxyl groups.

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