Iron release from ovotransferrin in acidic media (3 , pH , 6) occurs in at least six kinetic steps. The first is a very fast (# 5 ms) decarbonation of the iron-loaded protein. Iron release from both sites of the protein is controlled by what appear to be slow proton transfers. The N-site loses its iron first in two steps, the first occurring in the tenth of a second range with second order rate constant k 1 = (2.30^0.10) à 10 4 m 21´s21 , first order rate constant k 21 = (1.40^0.10) s 21 and equilibrium constant K 1a = (60^6) mm. The second step occurs in the second range with a second order rate constant k 2 = (5.2^0.15) à 10 3 m 21´s21 , first order rate constant k 22 = (0.2^0.02) s 21 and equilibrium constant K 2a = (39^5) mm. Iron is afterward lost from the C-site of the protein by two different pathways, one in the presence of a strong Fe(III) ligand such as citrate and the other in the presence of weak ligands such as formate or acetate. The first step, common to both paths, is a slow proton uptake which occurs in the tens of second range with a second order rate constant k 3 = (1.22^0.03) à 10 3 m 21´s21 and equilibrium constant K 3a = (1.0^0.1) mm. In the presence of citrate, this step is followed by formation of an intermediate complex with monoferric ovotransferrin; stability constant K LC = (0.435^0.015) mm. This last step is rate-controlled by slow proton gain which occurs in the hundred second range with a second order rate constant k 4 = (1.05^0.05) à 10 4 m 21´s21 , first order rate constant k 24 = (1.0^0.1) à 10 22 s 21 and equilibrium constant K 4a = (0.95^0.15) mm. In the presence of a weak iron(III) ligand such as acetate or formate, formation of an intermediate complex is not detected and iron release is controlled by two final slow proton uptakes. The first occurs in the hundred to thousand second range, second order rate constant k 5 = (6.90^0.30) à 10 6 m 21´s21 . The last step occurs in the thousand second range. Iron release by ovotransferrin is similar but not identical to that of serum-transferrin. It is slower and occurs at lower pH values. However, as seen for serum-transferrin, it seems to involve the protonation of the amino acid sidechains involved in iron co-ordination and perhaps those implicated in interdomain H-bonds. The observed proton transfers are, then, probably controlled by the change in conformation of the binding lobes from closed when iron-loaded to open in the apo-form.Keywords: transferrin; ovotransferrin; iron metabolism; stopped-flow.Transferrins constitute the most important iron regulation system in vertebrates and some invertebrates, such as worms and insects [1]. Soluble transferrins, such as serum-transferrin, lactoferrin and ovotransferrin, are glycoproteins consisting of a single chain of about 700 amino acids and 80 kDa. These proteins have very similar 3D structures and are all bilobal. Each lobe contains an iron complexation cleft, in which the metal is co-ordinated to the side-chains of four amino acid ligands and a synergistic carbonate or bicarbonate...