Using site-specific mutagenesis, we have constructed two mutants of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (ecDHFR) to investigate further the function of a weakly acidic side chain at position 27 in substrate protonation: Asp27-->Glu (D27E) and Asp27-->Cys (D27C). The crystal structure of D27E ecDHFR in a binary complex with methotrexate shows that the side-chain oxygen atoms of Glu27 are in almost precisely the same location as those of Asp27 in the wild-type enzyme. Kinetic evidence indicates that Glu27 can indeed function efficiently in the proton relay to dihydrofolate. Even though vertebrate DHFRs all have a glutamic acid at the structurally equivalent position, the kinetic properties of Glu27 ecDHFR more closely resemble those of wild-type bacterial DHFRs than of vertebrate DHFRs. The D27C mutation produced an enzyme still capable of relaying a proton to dihydrofolate, but with the intrinsic pKa in its pH-activity profiles shifted upward to values characteristic of the more basic thiolate group. The crystal structure of the binary complex with methotrexate reveals two unexpected features: (1) the Cys27 sulfhydryl group does not point toward the pteridine-binding site, but the side chain of this residue is instead rotated 120 degrees to interact with a tyrosine side chain projecting from a neighboring beta-strand; (2) a bound ethanol molecule occupies a cavity adjacent to methotrexate. Ethanol is a component of the crystallization medium.