Protein sulfenic acids are reactive intermediates in the catalytic cycles of many enzymes as well as the in formation of other redox states. Sulfenic acid formation is a reversible post- translational modification with potential for protein regulation. Dimedone ( 5,5- dimethyl- 1,3- cyclohexanedione) is commonly used in vitro to study sulfenation of purified proteins, selectively " tagging" them, allowing monitoring by mass spectrometry. However dimedone is of little use in complex protein mixtures because selective monitoring of labeling is not possible. To address this issue, we synthesized a novel biotinylated derivative of dimedone, keeping the dione cassette required for sulfenate reactivity but adding the functionality of a biotin tag. Biotin- amido( 5- methyl- 5- carboxamidocyclohexane 1,3-dione) tetragol ( biotin dimedone) was prepared in six steps, combining 3,5- dimethoxybenzoic acid ( Birch reduction, ultimately leading to the dimedone unit with a carboxylate functionality), 1- amino- 11- azido- 3,6,9- trioxaundecane ( a differentially substituted tetragol spacer), and biotin. We loaded biotin dimedone ( 0.1 mM, 30 min) into rat ventricular myocytes, treated them with H2O2 ( 0.1- 10,000 mu M, 5 min), and monitored derivatization on Western blots using streptavidin- horseradish peroxidase. There was a dose- dependent increase in labeling of multiple proteins that was maximal at 0.1 or 1 mM H2O2 and declined sharply below basal with 10 mM treatment. Cellwide labeling was observed in fixed cells probed with avidinFITC using a confocal fluorescence microscope. Similar H2O2- induced labeling was observed in isolated rat hearts. Hearts loaded and subjected to hypoxia showed a striking loss of labeling, which returned when oxygen was resupplied, highlighting the protein sulfenates as oxygen sensors. Cardiac proteins that were sulfenated during oxidative stress were purified with avidin- agarose and identified by separation of tryptic digests by liquid chromatography with on- line analysis by mass spectrometry.