Fibrinogen molecules are Ϸ45 nm in length and are comprised of three major globular domains. There are two outer D domains, each connected by a ''coiled-coil'' region to the central E domain, within which the halves of each molecule are joined by disulfide bridges (Fig. 1). This article is concerned with precisely locating the carboxy-terminal segment of the ␥ chain, a region termed ''␥ XL '', that comprises one of several self-association sites in fibrinogen D domains (1). The ␥ XL sequence contains one factor XIIIa amine donor͞acceptor-crosslinking site between ␥406K and ␥398Q or ␥399Q [␥398͞ 399Q] (2-4), as well as an overlapping platelet fibrinogen receptor-binding site lying between ␥400 and ␥411 (5).To approach our objective, we prepared fibrinogen into which thioacetyl cadaverine amine donors had been covalently incorporated at glutamine acceptor sites in the presence of factor XIIIa (plasma transglutaminase) (Fig. 2). Subsequently, we labeled the thiol group on the cadaverine with an electron dense thiol-specific gold-cluster compound, undecagoldmonoaminopropyl maleimide (Au 11 ) (6). Au 11 -cadaverinelabeled fibrinogen was then examined by high resolutionscanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) (7) to locate the Au 11 clusters that had been covalently attached at the amine acceptor site (␥398͞399Q) in the D domain. The relatively small diameter (0.8 nm) of the Au 11 cluster (6) provides a discriminating ultrastructural probe for pinpointing its position in the fibrinogen molecule. Gold cluster labeling has been applied to several proteins or nucleic acids for topographical molecular mapping of specific binding sites or domains (7-11 inter alia) and in particular has been used to determine precisely the location as well as the orientation of the amino terminal portions of the two A␣ chains within each fibrinogen E domain (12).The C-terminal region of each ␥ chain contains a single crosslinking site at which factor XIIIa catalyzes the formation of ␥ dimers (1, 13, 14) by incorporating intermolecular reciprocal -(␥-glutamyl) lysine bridges between a donor ␥406 lysine of one chain and a glutamine acceptor at ␥398͞399 of another (2-4). ␥ chain crosslinking occurs solely between these residues (2-4, 15, 16), whereas there are several amine donor lysine and amine acceptor glutamine sites in A␣ chains (16,17). Primary amine compounds like cadaverine are competitive amine donor substrates that become specifically incorporated in the presence of factor XIIIa at the single ␥ chain acceptor site or at one or more ␣ chain acceptor sites (2-4, 15, 18, 19).Noncovalent interaction between D and E domains in an assembling fibrin polymer facilitates the antiparallel intermolecular alignment of ␥ chain pairs in D domains, thereby accelerating the rate at which factor XIIIa-catalyzed crosslinking occurs at ␥ XL sites (1,14). Since the report by Fowler et al. (20), which involved electron microscopic observations on crosslinked fibrinogen dimers, it has been commonly held that the C-terminal ␥ chain crossl...