Baker's yeast L-lactate dehydrogenase (flavocytochrome b2) is a typical flavodehydrogenase, in that it accepts two electrons from the substrate but has a monoelectronic acceptor. Yet it forms a red semiquinone [Capeillere Blandin et al. Eur. J. Bioclwm. 54, 549-566 (1975)j and it is shown in this paper that it forms a reversible covalent complex with sulfite (Kd = 1.4 pM). This complex can be observed by difference spectroscopy and provides a convenient tool for visualizing the flavin chromophore, usually hidden behind the intense heme absorbance. A number of anions (D-lactate, oxalate and pyruvate) are inhibitors of the enzymatic reaction and induce spectral perturbations of the flavin spectrum. It is concluded that probably two positive charges exist at the active site: one which stabilizes the red semiquinone and one which attracts organic anions and sulfite. It is also concluded that the correlation between reactivity with sulfite and reactivity with oxygen among flavoproteins may not be as general as previously proposed [Massey et al. J. Biol. Chem. 244,[3999][4000][4001][4002][4003][4004][4005][4006] (1 969)].Free reduced flavin is rapidly reoxidized by oxygen, whereas enzyme-bound flavin either keeps or loses this property, according to the function of the protein. This phenomenon provides the basis for the now classical distinction, among flavoproteins, between oxidases and dehydrogenases. It is clear that the protein moiety plays a fundamental role in modulating the reactivity of the bound flavin, but this role is at present poorly understood, in spite of numerous efforts.A few years ago, Massey et al. [l] proposed an interesting correlation between the reactivity of flavoproteins toward oxygen and toward sulfite. It was shown that a number of flavoproteins were bleached by sulfite, which reversibly formed a covalent bond with N-5 of the flavin nucleus [2]; those proteins that reacted were oxidases and formed anionic (red) semiquinones; those that did not react were dehydrogenases and formed neutral (blue) semiquinones. A tentative explanation was presented, based on these and other observations: a positive charge at the active site of oxidases would facilitate sulfite binding and stabilize the anionic semiquinone ;