Acetaldehyde, the first product of alcohol metabolism, is highly reactive, Several proteins have been shown to be covalently modified by acetaldehyde in vivo, We have previously reported the detection of a cytosolic 37-kd protein-acetaldehyde adduct (-AA) in the Liver of alcohol-fed rats, The liver extract hom an alcohol-fed rat was subjected to a-dimensional (2D) sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane, and the 37-kd protein-AA spot was digested with trypsin and sequenced for amino acids, Degenerate oligonucleotides corresponding to a peptide sequence of the protein-AA were used as the probe to screen a lambda gt11 rat liver complementary DNA (cDNA) library, A clone that extended to a potential ATC: start codon was identified, The open reading frame was 978 nucleotides long, encoding 326 amino acid residues, The sequence matched that of rat liver Delta(4)-3-ketosteroid 5 beta-reductase, The cloned cDNA was expressed in Escherichia coli using pGEX-KG as the vector, The expressed protein was found to be of correct molecular weight, It reacted with an antibody that recognized the unmodified liver 37-kd protein by Western blotting, Peptide profiles of tryptic digested recombinant protein and the purified rat liver 37-kd protein were similar and yielded the same peptide sequence, Delta(4)-3-ketosteroid 5 beta-reductase catalyzes the reduction of key intermediates during bile acid biosynthesis, Whether modification of the 5 beta-reductase by acetaldehyde affects the enzyme activity and bile acid synthesis remains to be studied.