Interferons display a wide range of antiviral, antiproliferative, and immunomodulatory activities on a variety of cell types and have been used to treat many diseases including hairy-cell leukemia and hepatitis B and C and have also been applied to other therapeutic areas. To improve the pharmacological properties of interferon (IFN) alpha-2b, a long-acting pegylated form (PEG-IFN) has been developed [PEG, monomethoxy poly(ethylene glycol) with average molecular mass of 12 000 Da]. PEG-IFN is a mixture of pegylated proteins with differing sites of PEG attachment. To identify the major positional isomer in the pegylated material [PEG-IFN(His-34)], NMR studies were conducted on a subtilisin-digested N-acetylated peptide of the major positional isomer [PEG-IFN(His-34)dig], synthetic peptide analogues containing His-34, as well as unmodified IFN and PEG-IFN(His-34). Our studies reveal a novel interferon-polymer attachment site as a histidine-linked interferon conjugate. We show that the major component of PEG-IFN is pegylated in the imidazole side chain of histidine-34. Chemical shift data suggest that pegylation occurs mainly at the N-delta 1 position in the imidzole side chain of this residue. This positional isomer, PEG-IFN(His-34), comprises approximately 47% of the total pegylated species when PEG-IFN is synthesized under the current experimental conditions at pH 6.5 with an electrophilic derivative of PEG, succinimidyl carbonate PEG. The reversibility of the histidine modification was examined. The PEG-imidazole adduct in the intact protein, PEG-IFN(His-34), is labile but much mon stable than in the peptide, PEG-IFN(His-34)dig. Apparently, the tertiary structure of the intact protein protects the His(34)-imidazole ring from depegylation.