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Pyroglutamic acid

molfile | zoom
MW 129.11 g/mol
PubChem 7405
CAS [98-79-3]
IUPAC
InChI

Pyroglutamic acid, or pidolic acid, is an uncommon amino acid derivative in which the free amino group of glutamic acid cyclizes to form a lactam. It is found in many proteins including bacteriorhodopsin. N-terminal glutamine residues can spontaneously cyclize to become pyroglutamate. This is one of several forms of blocked N-terminals which present a problem for N-terminal sequencing using Edman chemistry, which requires a free primary amino group not present in pyroglutamic acid. The enzyme pyroglutamate aminopeptidase can restore a free N-terminus by cleaving off the pyroglutamate residue.

1 edit since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jun 22, 2008 by DOI bot (611).

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