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1.
We show that the reductants present in the invitro assay used to measure the formation of adenosylcobalamin from cob(III)alamin by cell-free extracts of human fibroblasts result in the non-enzymatic reduction of cob(III)alamin to cob(I)alamin. Hence, the invitro assay uniquely estimates the activity of ATP:cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase (EC 2.5.1.17). Based on additional studies with extracts of fibroblasts from patients in the cblB class of human methylmalonic acidemia and from their parents, we conclude that this mutant class results from a specific deficiency of adenosyltransferase activity which is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait.  相似文献   

2.
ATP:cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase (EutT) of Salmonella enterica was overproduced and enriched to approximately 70% homogeneity, and its basic kinetic parameters were determined. Abundant amounts of EutT protein were produced, but all of it remained insoluble. Soluble active EutT protein (approximately 70% homogeneous) was obtained after treatment with detergent. Under conditions in which cobalamin (Cbl) was saturating, Km(ATP) = 10 microm, kcat = 0.03 s(-1), and Vmax = 54.5 nm min(-1). Similarly, under conditions in which MgATP was saturating, Km(Cbl) = 4.1 microm, kcat = 0.06 s(-1), and Vmax = 105 nm min(-1). Unlike other ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferases in the cell (i.e. CobA and PduO), EutT activity was > or =50-fold higher with ATP versus GTP, and EutT retained 80% of its activity with ADP substituted for ATP and was completely inactive with AMP as substrate, indicating that the enzyme requires the beta-phosphate group of the nucleotide substrate. The data suggest that the amino group of adenine might play a role in nucleotide recognition and/or binding. Unlike the housekeeping CobA enzyme, EutT was not inhibited by inorganic tripolyphosphate (PPPi). Results from 31P NMR spectroscopy studies identified PPi and Pi as by-products of the EutT reaction. In the absence of Cbl, EutT cleaved ATP into adenosine and PPPi, suggesting that PPPi is broken down into PPi and Pi. Electron transfer protein partners for EutT were not encoded by the eut operon. EutT-dependent activity was detected in cell-free extracts of cobA strains enriched for EutT when FMN and NADH were used to reduce cob(III)alamin to cob(I)alamin.  相似文献   

3.
Cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (MetH) of Escherichia coli is a 136 kDa, modular enzyme that undergoes large conformational changes as it uses a cobalamin cofactor as a donor or acceptor in three separate methyl transfer reactions. At different points during the reaction cycle, the coordination to the cobalt of the cobalamin changes; most notably, the imidazole side chain of His759 that coordinates to the cobalamin in the "His-on" state can dissociate to produce a "His-off" state. Here, two distinct species of the cob(II)alamin-bound His759Gly variant have been identified and separated. Limited proteolysis with trypsin was employed to demonstrate that the two species differ in protein conformation. Magnetic circular dichroism and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies were used to show that the two species also differ with respect to the axial coordination to the central cobalt ion of the cobalamin cofactor. One form appears to be in a conformation poised for reductive methylation with adenosylmethionine; this form was readily reduced to cob(I)alamin and subsequently methylated [albeit yielding a unique, five-coordinate methylcob(III)alamin species]. Our spectroscopic data revealed that this form contains a five-coordinate cob(II)alamin species, with a water molecule as an axial ligand to the cobalt. The other form appears to be in a catalytic conformation and could not be reduced to cob(I)alamin under any of the conditions tested, which precluded conversion to the methylcob(III)alamin state. This form was found to possess an effectively four-coordinate cob(II)alamin species that has neither water nor histidine coordinated to the cobalt center. The formation of this four-coordinate cob(II)alamin "dead-end" species in the His759Gly variant illustrates the importance of the His759 residue in governing the equilibria between the different conformations of MetH.  相似文献   

4.
The final step in the conversion of vitamin B(12) into coenzyme B(12) (adenosylcobalamin, AdoCbl) is catalyzed by ATP:cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase (ATR). Prior studies identified the human ATR and showed that defects in its encoding gene underlie cblB methylmalonic aciduria. Here two common polymorphic variants of the ATR that are found in normal individuals are expressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and partially characterized. The specific activities of ATR variants 239K and 239M were 220 and 190 nmol min(-1) mg(-1), and their K(m) values were 6.3 and 6.9 mum for ATP and 1.2 and 1.6 mum for cob(I)alamin, respectively. These values are similar to those obtained for previously studied bacterial ATRs indicating that both human variants have sufficient activity to mediate AdoCbl synthesis in vivo. Investigations also showed that purified recombinant human methionine synthase reductase (MSR) in combination with purified ATR can convert cob(II)alamin to AdoCbl in vitro. In this system, MSR reduced cob(II)alamin to cob(I)alamin that was adenosylated to AdoCbl by ATR. The optimal stoichiometry for this reaction was approximately 4 MSR/ATR and results indicated that MSR and ATR physically interacted in such a way that the highly reactive reaction intermediate [cob(I)alamin] was sequestered. The finding that MSR reduced cob(II)alamin to cob(I)alamin for AdoCbl synthesis (in conjunction with the prior finding that MSR reduced cob(II)alamin for the activation of methionine synthase) indicates a dual physiological role for MSR.  相似文献   

5.
Dorweiler JS  Finke RG  Matthews RG 《Biochemistry》2003,42(49):14653-14662
Cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (MetH) catalyzes the transfer of methyl groups between methyltetrahydrofolate (CH(3)-H(4)folate) and homocysteine, with the enzyme-bound cobalamin serving as an intermediary in the methyl transfers. An MetH fragment comprising residues 2-649 contains modules that bind and activate CH(3)-H(4)folate and homocysteine and catalyze methyl transfers to and from exogenous cobalamin. Comparison of the rates of reaction of cobalamin, which contains a dimethylbenzimidazole nucleotide coordinated to the cobalt in the lower axial position, and cobinamide, which lacks the dimethylbenzimidazole nucleotide, allows assessment of the degree of stabilization the dimethylbenzimidazole base provides for methyl transfer between CH(3)-H(4)folate bound to MetH(2-649) and exogenous cob(I)alamin. When the reactions of cob(I)alamin or cob(I)inamide with CH(3)-H(4)folate are compared, the observed second-order rate constants are 2.7-fold faster for cob(I)alamin; in the reverse direction, methylcobinamide reacts 35-fold faster than methylcobalamin with enzyme-bound tetrahydrofolate. These measurements can be used to estimate the influence of the dimethylbenzimidazole ligand on both the thermodynamics and kinetics of methyl transfer between methyltetrahydrofolate and cob(I)alamin or cob(I)inamide. The free energy change for methyl transfer from CH(3)-H(4)folate to cob(I)alamin is 2.8 kcal more favorable than that for methyl transfer to cob(I)inamide. Dimethylbenzimidazole contributes approximately 0.6 kcal/mol of stabilization for the forward reaction and approximately 2.2 kcal/mol of destabilization for the reverse reaction. Binding of methylcobalamin to full-length methionine synthase is accompanied by ligand substitution, and switching between "base-on" and "base-off" states of the cofactor has been demonstrated [Bandarian, V., et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 8156-8163]. The present results disfavor a major role for such switching in catalysis of methyl transfer, and are consistent with the hypothesis that the primary role of the ligand triad in methionine synthase is controlling the distribution of enzyme conformations during catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism of reductive methylation of cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (5-methyltetrahydrofolate:homocysteine methyltransferase, EC 2.1.1.13) has been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroelectrochemistry. The enzyme as isolated is inactive, and its UV/visible absorbance and EPR spectra are characteristic of cob(II)alamin. There is an absolute requirement for catalytic amounts of AdoMet and a reducing system for the formation and maintenance of active enzyme during in vitro turnover. The midpoint potentials of the enzyme-bound cob(II)alamin/cob(I)alamin and cob(III)alamin/cob(II)alamin couples have been determined to be -526 +/- 5 and +273 +/- 4 mV (versus the standard hydrogen electrode), respectively. The presence of either CH3-H4folate or AdoMet shifts the equilibrium distribution of cobalamin species observed during reduction by converting cob(I)alamin to methylcobalamin. The magnitude of these shifts is however vastly different, with AdoMet lowering the concentration of cob(II)alamin at equilibrium by a factor of at least 3 X 10(7), while CH3-H4folate lowers it by a factor of 19. These studies of coupled reduction/methylation reactions elucidate the absolute requirement for AdoMet in the in vitro assay system, in which the ambient potential is approximately -350 mV versus the standard hydrogen electrode. At this potential, the equilibrium distribution of cobalamin in the presence of CH3-H4folate would be greatly in favor of the cob(II)alamin species, whereas in the presence of AdoMet the equilibrium favors methylated enzyme. In these studies, a base-on form of cob(II)alamin in which the dimethylbenzimidazole substituent of the corrin ring is the lower axial ligand for the cobalt has been observed for the first time on methionine synthase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Reduction of the cobalt ion of cobalamin from the Co(III) to the Co(I) oxidation state is essential for the synthesis of adenosylcobalamin, the coenzymic form of this cofactor. A cob(II)alamin reductase activity in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 was isolated to homogeneity. N-terminal analysis of the homogeneous protein identified NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase (Fre) (EC 1.6.8.1) as the enzyme responsible for this activity. The fre gene was cloned, and the overexpressed protein, with a histidine tag at its N terminus, was purified to homogeneity by nickel affinity chromatography. His-tagged Fre reduced flavins (flavin mononucleotide [FMN] and flavin adenine dinucleotide [FAD]) and cob(III)alamin to cob(II)alamin very efficiently. Photochemically reduced FMN substituted for Fre in the reduction of cob(III)alamin to cob(II)alamin, indicating that the observed cobalamin reduction activity was not Fre dependent but FMNH(2) dependent. Enzyme-independent reduction of cob(III)alamin to cob(II)alamin by FMNH(2) occurred at a rate too fast to be measured. The thermodynamically unfavorable reduction of cob(II)alamin to cob(I)alamin was detectable by alkylation of the cob(I)alamin nucleophile with iodoacetate. Detection of the product, caboxymethylcob(III)alamin, depended on the presence of FMNH(2) in the reaction mixture. FMNH(2) failed to substitute for potassium borohydride in in vitro assays for corrinoid adenosylation catalyzed by the ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase (CobA) enzyme, even under conditions where Fre and NADH were present in the reaction mixture to ensure that FMN was always reduced. These results were interpreted to mean that Fre was not responsible for the generation of cob(I)alamin in vivo. Consistent with this idea, a fre mutant displayed wild-type cobalamin biosynthetic phenotypes. It is proposed that S. enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 may not have a cob(III)alamin reductase enzyme and that, in vivo, nonadenosylated cobalamin and other corrinoids are maintained as co(II)rrinoids by reduced flavin nucleotides generated by Fre and other flavin oxidoreductases.  相似文献   

8.
Fleischhacker AS  Matthews RG 《Biochemistry》2007,46(43):12382-12392
Cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (MetH) of Escherichia coli is a large, modular enzyme that uses a cobalamin prosthetic group as a donor or acceptor in three separate methyl transfer reactions. The prosthetic group alternates between methylcobalamin and cob(I)alamin during catalysis as homocysteine is converted to methionine using a methyl group derived from methyltetrahydrofolate. Occasional oxidation of cob(I)alamin to cob(II)alamin inactivates the enzyme. Reductive methylation with flavodoxin and adenosylmethionine returns the enzyme to an active methylcobalamin state. At different points during the reaction cycle, the coordination state of the cobalt of the cobalamin changes. The imidazole side chain of His759 coordinates to cobalamin in a "His-on" state and dissociates to produce a "His-off" state. The His-off state has been associated with a conformation of MetH that is poised for reactivation of cobalamin by reductive methylation rather than catalysis. Our studies on cob(III)alamins bound to MetH, specifically aqua-, methyl-, and n-propylcobalamin, show a correlation between the accessibility of the reactivation conformation and the order of the established ligand trans influence. The trans influence also controls the affinity of MetH in the cob(III)alamin form for flavodoxin. Flavodoxin, which acts to shift the conformational equilibrium toward the reactivation conformation, binds less tightly to MetH when the cob(III)alamin has a strong trans ligand and therefore has less positive charge on cobalt. These results are compared to those for cob(II)alamin MetH, illustrating that access to the reactivation conformation is governed by the net charge on the cobalt as well as the trans influence in cob(III)alamins.  相似文献   

9.
Different preparations of the methylreductase were tested in a simplified methylcoenzyme M methylreductase assay with artificial electron donors under a nitrogen atmosphere. ATP and Mg2+ stimulated the reaction. Tris(2,2'-bipyridine)ruthenium (II), chromous chloride, chromous acetate, titanium III citrate, 2,8-diaminoacridine, formamidinesulfinic acid, cob(I)alamin (B12s), and dithiothreitol were tested as electron donors; the most effective donor was titanium III citrate. Methylreductase (component C) was prepared by 80% ammonium sulfate precipitation, 70% ammonium sulfate precipitation, phenyl-Sepharose chromatography, Mono Q column chromatography, DEAE-cellulose column chromatography, or tetrahydromethanopterin affinity column chromatography. Methylreductase preparations which were able to catalyze methanogenesis in the simplified reaction mixture contained contaminating proteins. Homogeneous component C obtained from a tetrahydromethanopterin affinity column was not active in the simplified assay but was active in a methylreductase assay that contained additional protein components.  相似文献   

10.
Methyl-coenzyme M formation from coenzyme M and methanol in Methanosarcina barkeri is catalysed by an enzyme system composed of three polypeptides MtaA, MtaB and MtaC, the latter of which harbours a corrinoid prosthetic group. We report here that MtaC can be substituted by free cob(I)alamin which is methylated with methanol in an MtaB-catalysed reaction and demethylated with coenzyme M in an MtaA-catalysed reaction. Methyl transfer from methanol to coenzyme M was found to proceed at a relatively high specific activity at micromolar concentrations of cob(I)alamin. This finding was surprising because the methylation of cob(I)alamin catalysed by MtaB alone and the demethylation of methylcob(III)alamin catalysed by MtaA alone exhibit apparent Km for cob(I)alamin and methylcob(III)alamin of above 1 mm. A possible explanation is that MtaA positively affects the MtaB catalytic efficiency and vice versa by decreasing the apparent Km for their corrinoid substrates. Activation of MtaA by MtaB was methanol-dependent. In the assay for methanol:coenzyme M methyltransferase activity cob(I)alamin could be substituted by cob(I)inamide which is devoid of the nucleotide loop. Substitution was, however, only possible when the assays were supplemented with imidazole: approximately 1 mm imidazole being required for half-maximal activity. Methylation of cob(I)inamide with methanol was found to be dependent on imidazole but not on the demethylation of methylcob(III)inamide with coenzyme M. The demethylation reaction was even inhibited by imidazole. The structure and catalytic mechanism of the MtaABC complex are compared with the cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase.  相似文献   

11.
Reaction of alkylcobalamins with thiols   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Carbon-13 NMR spectroscopy and phosphorus-31 NMR spectroscopy have been used to study the reaction of several alkylcobalamins with 2-mercaptoethanol. At alkaline pH, when the thiol is deprotonated, the alkyl-transfer reactions involve a nucleophilic attack of the thiolate anion on the Co-methylene carbon of the cobalamins, yielding alkyl thioethers and cob(II)alamin. In these nucleophilic displacement reactions cob(I)alamin is presumably formed as an intermediate. The higher alkylcobalamins react more slowly than methylcobalamin. The lower reactivity of ethyl- and propylcobalamin is probably the basis of the inhibition of the corrinoid-dependent methyl-transfer systems by propyl iodide. The transfer of the upper nucleoside ligand of adenosylcobalamin to 2-mercaptoethanol is a very slow process; S-adenosyl-mercaptoethanol and cob(II)alamin are the final products of the reaction. The dealkylation of (carboxymethyl)cobalamin is a much more facile reaction. At alkaline pH S-(carboxymethyl)mercaptoethanol and cob(II)alamin are produced, while at pH values below 8 the carbon-cobalt bond is cleaved reductively to acetate and cob(II)alamin. The reductive cleavage of the carbon-cobalt bond of (carboxymethyl)cobalamin by 2-mercaptoethanol is extremely fast when the cobalamin is in the "base-off" form. Because we have been unable to detect trans coordination of 2-mercaptoethanol, we favor a mechanism that involves a hydride attack on the Co-methylene carbon of (carboxymethyl)cobalamin rather than a trans attack of the thiol on the cobalt atom.  相似文献   

12.
The anaerobic veratrol O-demethylase mediates the transfer of the methyl group of the phenyl methyl ether veratrol to tetrahydrofolate. The primary methyl group acceptor is the cobalt of a corrinoid protein, which has to be in the +1 oxidation state to bind the methyl group. Due to the negative redox potential of the cob(II)/cob(I)alamin couple, autoxidation of the cobalt may accidentally occur. In this study, the reduction of the corrinoid to the superreduced [CoI] state was investigated. The ATP-dependent reduction of the corrinoid protein of the veratrol O-demethylase was shown to be dependent on titanium(III) citrate as electron donor and on an activating enzyme. In the presence of ATP, activating enzyme, and Ti(III), the redox potential versus the standard hydrogen electrode (E SHE) of the cob(II)alamin/cob(I)alamin couple in the corrinoid protein was determined to be −290 mV (pH 7.5), whereas E SHE at pH 7.5 was lower than −450 mV in the absence of either activating enzyme or ATP. ADP, AMP, or GTP could not replace ATP in the activation reaction. The ATP analogue adenosine-5′-(β,γ-imido)triphosphate (AMP-PNP, 2–4 mM) completely inhibited the corrinoid reduction in the presence of ATP (2 mM).  相似文献   

13.
A novel dehalogenating/transhalogenating enzyme, halomethane:bisulfide/halide ion methyltransferase, has been isolated from the facultatively methylotrophic bacterium strain CC495, which uses chloromethane (CH(3)Cl) as the sole carbon source. Purification of the enzyme to homogeneity was achieved in high yield by anion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. The methyltransferase was composed of a 67-kDa protein with a corrinoid-bound cobalt atom. The purified enzyme was inactive but was activated by preincubation with 5 mM dithiothreitol and 0.5 mM CH(3)Cl; then it catalyzed methyl transfer from CH(3)Cl, CH(3)Br, or CH(3)I to the following acceptor ions (in order of decreasing efficacy): I(-), HS(-), Cl(-), Br(-), NO(2)(-), CN(-), and SCN(-). Spectral analysis indicated that cobalt in the native enzyme existed as cob(II)alamin, which upon activation was reduced to the cob(I)alamin state and then was oxidized to methyl cob(III)alamin. During catalysis, the enzyme shuttles between the methyl cob(III)alamin and cob(I)alamin states, being alternately demethylated by the acceptor ion and remethylated by halomethane. Mechanistically the methyltransferase shows features in common with cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase from Escherichia coli. However, the failure of specific inhibitors of methionine synthase such as propyl iodide, N(2)O, and Hg(2+) to affect the methyltransferase suggests significant differences. During CH(3)Cl degradation by strain CC495, the physiological acceptor ion for the enzyme is probably HS(-), a hypothesis supported by the detection in cell extracts of methanethiol oxidase and formaldehyde dehydrogenase activities which provide a metabolic route to formate. 16S rRNA sequence analysis indicated that strain CC495 clusters with Rhizobium spp. in the alpha subdivision of the Proteobacteria and is closely related to strain IMB-1, a recently isolated CH(3)Br-degrading bacterium (T. L. Connell Hancock, A. M. Costello, M. E. Lidstrom, and R. S. Oremland, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64:2899-2905, 1998). The presence of this methyltransferase in bacterial populations in soil and sediments, if widespread, has important environmental implications.  相似文献   

14.
The kinetic mechanism of the reaction catalyzed by cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase from Escherichia coli K12 has been investigated by both steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic analyses. The reaction catalyzed by methionine synthase involves the transfer of a methyl group from methyltetrahydrofolate to homocysteine to generate tetrahydrofolate and methionine. The postulated reaction mechanism invokes an initial transfer of the methyl group to the enzyme to generate enzyme-bound methylcobalamin and tetrahydrofolate. Enzyme-bound methylcobalamin then donates its methyl group to homocysteine to generate methionine and cob(I)alamin. The key questions that were addressed in this study were the following: (1) Does the reaction involve a sequential or ping-pong mechanism? (2) Is enzyme-bound cob(I)alamin a kinetically competent intermediate? (3) If the reaction does involve a sequential mechanism, what is the nature of the "free" enzyme to which the substrates bind; i.e., is the prosthetic group in the cob(I)alamin or methylcobalamin state? Both the steady-state and rapid reaction studies were conducted at 25 degrees C under anaerobic conditions. Initial velocity analysis under steady-state conditions revealed a family of parallel lines suggesting either a ping-pong mechanism or an ordered sequential mechanism. Steady-state product inhibition studies provided evidence for an ordered sequential mechanism in which the first substrate to bind is methyltetrahydrofolate and the last product to be released is tetrahydrofolate. Pre-steady-state kinetic studies were then conducted to determine the rate constants for the various reactions. Enzyme-bound cob(I)alamin was shown to react very rapidly with methyltetrahydrofolate (with an observed rate constant of 250 s-1 versus a turnover number under maximal velocity conditions of 19 s-1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
16.
Cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (5-methyltetrahydrofolate-homocysteine methyltransferase, EC 2.1.1.13) has been isolated from Escherichia coli B in homogeneous form. The enzyme is isolated in an inactive form with the visible absorbance properties of cob(II)alamin. The inactive enzyme exhibits an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum at 38 K that is characteristic of cob(II)alamin at acid pH, where the protonated dimethylbenzimidazole substituent is not coordinated with the cobalt nucleus (base-off cobalamin). An additional, variable component of the EPR spectrum of the inactive enzyme has the characteristics of a cob(III)alamin-superoxide complex. Previous work by others [Taylor, R.T., & Weissbach, H. (1969) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 129, 745-766. Fujii, K., & Huennekens, F.M. (1979) in Biochemical Aspects of Nutrition (Yagi, K., Ed.) pp 173-183, Japan Scientific Societies, Tokyo] has demonstrated that the enzyme can be activated by reductive methylation using adenosylmethionine as the methyl donor. We present data indicating that the conversion of inactive to methylated enzyme is correlated with the disappearance of the EPR spectrum as expected for the conversion of paramagnetic cob(II)alamin to diamagnetic methylcobalamin. When the methyl group is transferred from the methylated enzyme to homocysteine under aerobic conditions, cob(II)alamin/cob(III)alamin-superoxide enzyme is regenerated as indicated by the return of the visible absorbance properties of the initially isolated enzyme and partial return of the EPR spectrum. Our enzyme preparations contain copper in approximately 1:1 stoichiometry with cobalt as determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Our mechanistic understanding of the conversion of vitamin B12 into coenzyme B12 (a.k.a. adenosylcobalamin, AdoCbl) has been substantially advanced in recent years. Insights into the multiple roles played by ATP:cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase (ACA) enzymes have emerged through the crystallographic, spectroscopic, biochemical, and mutational analyses of wild-type and variant proteins. ACA enzymes circumvent the thermodynamic barrier posed by the very low redox potential associated with the reduction of cob(II)alamin to cob(I)alamin by generating a unique four-coordinate cob(II)alamin intermediate that is readily converted to cob(I)alamin by physiological reductants. ACA enzymes not only synthesize AdoCbl but also they deliver it to the enzymes that use it, and in some cases, enzymes in which its function is needed to maintain the fidelity of the AdoCbl delivery process have been identified. Advances in our understanding of ACA enzyme function have provided valuable insights into the role of specific residues, and into why substitutions of these residues have profound negative effects on human health. From an applied science standpoint, a better understanding of the adenosylation reaction may lead to more efficient ways of synthesizing AdoCbl.  相似文献   

18.
Magnusson OT  Frey PA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(5):1695-1702
3',4'-Anhydroadenosylcobalamin (anAdoCbl) is an analogue of the adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) coenzyme (Magnusson, O.Th., and Frey, P. A. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 8807-8813). This compound supports activity for diol dehydrase at 0.02% of that observed with AdoCbl. In a side reaction, however, anAdoCbl induces suicide inactivation by an electron-transfer mechanism. Homolytic cleavage of the Co-C bond of anAdoCbl at the active site of diol dehydrase was observed by spectrophotometric detection of cob(II)alamin. Anaerobic conversion of enzyme bound cob(II)alamin to cob(III)alamin, both in the absence and presence of substrate, indicates that the coenzyme derived 5'-deoxy-3',4'-anhydroadenosine-5'-yl serves as the oxidizing agent. This hypothesis is supported by the stoichiometric formation of 3',5'-dideoxyadenosine-4',5'-ene as the nucleoside cleavage product, as determined by high-performance liquid chromatography, mass spectrometry, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Experiments performed in deuterium oxide show that a single solvent exchangeable proton is incorporated into the product. These data are consistent with the intermediate formation of a transient allylic anion formed after one electron transfer from cob(II)alamin to the allylic 5'-deoxy-3',4'-anhydroadenosyl radical. Selective protonation at C3' was demonstrated by spectroscopic characterization of the purified product. This study provides an example of suicide inactivation of a radical enzyme brought about by a side reaction of an analogue of the radical intermediate.  相似文献   

19.
Methyl transfer from methylcobalamin to thiols. A reinvestigation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
H P Hogenkamp  G T Bratt  S Z Sun 《Biochemistry》1985,24(23):6428-6432
The methyl transfer from methylcobalamin to thiols has been reinvestigated. By use of methylcobalamin selectively enriched with 13C in the methyl moiety, the methyl transfer to thiols was followed by 13C NMR. The methyl transfer occurs in aqueous mildly alkaline (pH 8-12) solution, even in the complete absence of oxygen. 31P NMR and EPR studies demonstrate that cob(II)alamin is the final corrinoid product. However, the pH dependence of the methyl-transfer reaction from methylcobalamin to beta-mercaptoethanol is consistent only with a nucleophilic displacement of the methyl group by a thiolate anion, resulting in the heterolytic cleavage of the carbon-cobalt bond. Difference visible spectroscopic measurements of the reaction mixture suggest that cob(I)alamin is formed as an intermediate.  相似文献   

20.
The preparation of a covalent DNA conjugate of vitamin B12 by means of heterogeneous solid-phase synthesis is reported. The cyano-corrinoid made available, dipotassium Co(beta)-cyanocobalamin-(3'-->2'),(3'-->5')-bis-2'-deoxythymidyl-3'-ate (K(2)-4), was cleanly methylated at the Co center by electrosynthetic means. Aqueous solutions of the resulting organometallic DNA-B12 conjugate K(2)-5 exhibited spectroscopic properties indicative of significant weakening of the axial (Co-N) bond, together with a 25-times higher basicity relative to Co(beta)-methylcobalamin (2). Methyl-transfer equilibria of pH-neutral aqueous solutions of K(2)-5 and cob(I)alamin (K-7) on one side, and of cob(I)alamin-(3'-->2'),(3'-->5')-bis-2'-deoxythymidyl-3'-ate (K(3)-8) and methylcobalamin (2) on the other, were studied at room temperature (Scheme 3). The NMR-derived data provided an equilibrium constant of ca. 0.3. Activation of K(2)-5 for abstraction of its Co-bound Me group by a nucleophile (such as cob(I)alamin) was, thus, indicated.  相似文献   

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