Tyrosine sulfation

In biochemistry, tyrosine sulfation is a posttranslational modification where a sulfate group (−SO3) is added to a tyrosine residue of a protein molecule. Secreted proteins and extracellular parts of membrane proteins that pass through the Golgi apparatus may be sulfated. Sulfation was first discovered by Bettelheim in bovine fibrinopeptide B in 1954[1] and later found to be present in animals and plants but not in prokaryotes or in yeast.

  1. ^ Bettelheim, F. R. (1954). "Tyrosine-O-Sulfate in a Peptide from Fibrinogen". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 76 (10): 2838–2839. doi:10.1021/ja01639a073. ISSN 0002-7863.