Soluble cyanobacterial granule polypeptide (CGP), especially that isolated from recombinant Escherichia coli strains, consists of aspartic acid, arginine, and a greater amount of lysine than that in insoluble CGP isolated from cyanobacteria or various other recombinant bacteria. In vitro guanidination of lysine side chains of soluble CGP with o-methylisourea (OMIU) yielded the non-proteinogenic amino acid homoarginine. The modified soluble CGP consisted of 51 mol% aspartate, 14 mol% arginine, and 35 mol% homoarginine. The complete conversion of lysine residues to homoarginine was confirmed by (i) nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry, (ii) coupled liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, and (iii) high-performance liquid chromatography. Unlike soluble CGP, this new homoarginine-containing polyamide was soluble only under acidic or alkaline conditions and was insoluble in water or at a neutral pH. Thus, it showed solubility behavior similar to that of the natural insoluble polymer isolated from cyanobacteria, consisting of aspartic acid and arginine only. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed similar degrees of polymerization of the native (12- to 40-kDa) and modified (10- to 35-kDa) polymers. This study showed that the chemical structure and properties of a biopolymer could be changed by in vitro introduction of a new functional group after biosynthesis of the native polymer. In addition, the modified CGP could be digested in vitro using the cyanophycinase from Pseudomonas alcali-genes strain DIP1, yielding a new dipeptide consisting of aspartate and homoarginine.