sulfhydryls
Sulfhydryls, also called thiol groups, are chemical functional groups consisting of a sulfur atom bonded to a hydrogen atom, written as –SH. They are common in organic molecules and are especially prominent in the amino acid cysteine, where the side chain ends in a sulfhydryl group. Sulfhydryls are versatile in chemistry and biology due to the nucleophilic character of the sulfur atom.
In nomenclature, the substituent is called sulfanyl in systematic naming, but the term thiol is widely used
Biologically, sulfhydryl groups are abundant in proteins through cysteine residues. Free sulfhydryls can participate in catalysis,
Chemically, sulfhydryls react with alkylating agents to form thioethers and with acyl groups to form thioesters.