Tyr52 and Tyr73 are conserved amino acid residues throughout all vertebrate phospholipases A2. They are part of an extended hydrogen bonding system that links the N-terminal alpha-NH+-group to the catalytic residues His48 and Asp99. These tyrosines were replaced by phenylalanines in a porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 mutant, in which residues 62 - 66 had been deleted (DELTA62 - 66PLA2). The mutations did not affect the catalytic properties of the enzyme, nor the folding kinetics. The stability against denaturation by guanidine hydrochloride was decreased, however. To analyse how the enzyme compensates for the loss of the tyrosine hydroxyl group, the X-ray structures of the DELTAY52F and DELTAY73F mutants were determined. After crystallographic refinement the final crystallographic R-factors were 18.1% for the DELTAY52F mutant (data between 7 and 2.3 angstrom resolution) and 19.1% for the DELTAY73F mutant (data between 7 and 2.4 angstrom resolution). No conformational changes occurred in the mutants compared with the DELTA62 - 66PLA2, but an empty cavity formed at the site of the hydroxyl group of the former tyrosine. In both mutants the Asp99 side chain loses one of its hydrogen bonds and this might explain the observed destabilization