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1.
The roles of the D-ribosyl moiety and the bulky axial ligand of the nucleotide loop of adenosylcobalamin in coenzymic function have been investigated using two series of coenzyme analogs bearing various artificial bases. The 2-methylbenzimidazolyl trimethylene analog that exists exclusively in the base-off form was a totally inactive coenzyme for diol dehydratase and served as a competitive inhibitor. The benzimidazolyl trimethylene analog and the benzimidazolylcobamide coenzyme were highly active for diol dehydratase and ethanolamine ammonia-lyase. The imidazolylcobamide coenzyme was 59 and 9% as active as the normal coenzyme for diol dehydratase and ethanolamine ammonia-lyase, respectively. The latter analog served as an effective suicide coenzyme for both enzymes, although the partition ratio (k(cat)/k(inact)) of 630 for ethanolamine ammonia-lyase is much lower than that for diol dehydratase. Suicide inactivation was accompanied by the accumulation of a cob(II)amide species, indicating irreversible cleavage of the coenzyme Co-C bond during the inactivation. It was thus concluded that the bulkiness of a Co-coordinating base of the nucleotide loop is essential for both the initial activity and continuous catalytic turnovers. Since the k(cat)/k(inact) value for the imidazolylcobamide in diol dehydratase was 27-times higher than that for the imidazolyl trimethylene analog, it is clear that the ribosyl moiety protects the reaction intermediates from suicide inactivation. Stopped-flow measurements indicated that the rate of Co-C bond homolysis is essentially unaffected by the bulkiness of the Co-coordinating base for diol dehydratase. Thus, it seems unlikely that the Co-C bond is labilized through a ground state mechanochemical triggering mechanism in diol dehydratase.  相似文献   

2.
Novel vitamin B12 analogues in which the D-ribose moiety of the nucleotide loop was replaced by an oligomethylene group and a trimethylene analogue containing imidazole instead of 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole as well as cobinamide methyl phosphate were tested for biological activities with Escherichia coli 215, a B12- or methionine-auxotroph, and Lactobacillus leichmannii ATCC 7830 as test organisms. A cyano form of 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazolyl tetramethylene, trimethylene and hexamethylene analogues supported the growth of L. leichmannii in this order. 5.6-Dimethylbenzimidazolyl dimethylene and imidazolyl trimethylene analogues did not show B12 activity and behaved as weak B12 antagonists when added together with cyanocobalamin. An adenosyl form of the biologically active analogues served as coenzymes for ribonucleotide reductase of this bacterium, whereas that of the inactive analogues did not. The latter acted as weak competitive inhibitors against adenosylcobalamin. ON the contrary, all the analogues did not support the growth of E. coli 215 at all by themselves and inhibited the growth when added with a suboptimum level of cyanocobalamin. A methyl form of the analogues also did not support the growth of E. coli 215, although they served as active coenzymes for methionine synthase of the bacterium. Since unlabeled analogues strongly inhibited the uptake of [3H]cyanocobalamin by this bacterium, it seems likely that the analogues exert their anti-B12 activity toward E. coli 215 by blocking the B12-transport systemAbbreviations AdoCbl adenosylcobalamin - MeCbl methylcobalamin - CN-Cbl cyanocobalamin or vitamin B12 - Cbl cobalamin - (CN, aq)Cbi cyanoaquacobinamide - MeCbi methylcobinamide - Cbi cobinamide - (CN, aq)Cbi-PMe cyanoaquacobinamide methyl phosphate - Cbi-PMe cobinamide methyl phosphate - DBI 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole - DBIyl 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazolyl - FMNH2 fully reduced form of riboflavin 5-phosphate  相似文献   

3.
A series of 16 analogs of 5'-deoxy-5'-adenosylcobalamin (adenosylcobalamin) were examined for their effects on the diol dehydrase system of Klebsiella pneumoniae (Aerobacter Aerogenes). Four analogs, ara-adenosyl-, aristeromycyl-, 3-isoadenosyl-, and nebularylcobalamin, were able to function as coenzymes in the diol dehydrase reaction, coenzyme activity decreasing in that order. Like the native holoenzyme, complexes of the enzyme with these four analogs show a cob(II)alamin-like absorption peak or shoulder in the presence of 1,2-propanediol. Analogs containing hypoxanthine, cytosine, or benzimidazole do not function as coenzymes, but are weak competitive inhibitors in the presence of adenosylcobalamin. Analogs in which the D-ribosyl moiety is replaced by L-ribose or by an alkyl chain of 2 to 6 carbons are inactive as coenzymes, but act as competitive inhibitors with extremely high affinity for the apoenzyme. Complexes with the inactive analogs showed visible spectra similar to those of the corresponding free cobalamins. Upon anaerobic photolysis and subsequent aeration, complexes with the first group of inactive analogs produced unusually stabilized cob(II)alamin, while complexes with the second group of inactive analogs were readily photolyzed to a hydroxocobalamin-enzyme complex. Complexes with adeninylpentyl- and L-adenosylcobalamin were stable to light under the same conditions. These findings suggest that both the ribose and the adenine moiety of the nucleoside participate in enzyme-coenzyme interaction, involving not only the binding to the apoenzyme but also the activation of the carbon-cobalt bond.  相似文献   

4.
The presence of arginine in the active center of D-amino-acid oxidase is well documented although its role has been differently interpreted as being part of the substrate-binding site or the positively charged residue near the N1-C2 = O locus of the flavin coenzyme. To have a better insight into the role of the guanidinium group in D-amino-acid oxidase we have carried out inactivation studies using phenylglyoxal as an arginine-directed reagent. Loss of catalytic activity followed pseudo-first-order kinetics for the apoprotein whereas the holoenzyme showed a biphasic inactivation pattern. Benzoate had no effect on holoenzyme inactivation by phenylglyoxal and the coenzyme analog 8-mercapto-FAD did not provide any additional protection in comparison to the native coenzyme. Spectroscopic experiments indicated that the modified protein is unable to undergo catalysis owing to the loss of coenzyme-binding ability. Analyses of time-dependent activity loss versus arginine modification or [14C]phenylglyoxal incorporation showed the presence of one arginine essential for catalysis. The protection exerted by the coenzyme is consistent with the involvement of an active-site arginine in the correct binding of FAD to the protein moiety. Comparative analyses of CNBr fragments obtained from apoenzyme, holoenzyme and the 8-mercapto derivative of D-amino-acid oxidase after reaction with phenylglyoxal did not provide unequivocal identification of the essential arginine residue within the primary structure of the enzyme. However, they suggest that it might be localized in the N-terminal portion of the polypeptide chain and point to a role of phenylglyoxal-modifiable arginine in binding to the adenylate/pyrophosphate moiety of the flavin coenzyme.  相似文献   

5.
One subclass of B12-requiring enzymes is now known to bind their B12 coenzymes “base-off,” with a histidine residue from the protein supplying an imidazole ligand to the cobalt center. Recent results from Sirovatka and Finke (J.M. Sirovatka and R.G. Finke, J.Am. Chem. Soc. 119, (1997) 3057) show that imidazole has an extraordinary trans effect on the mode of carbon–cobalt bond cleavage in coenzyme B12 analogs, compared to pyridine or the natural 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole ligand, and it was suggested that a differential steric effect could, in part, account for the uniqueness of the imidazole ligand. Such a differential steric effect for imidazole and pyridine is now demonstrated by studies of the thermodynamics of ligation of these ligands to the α and β diastereomers of two alkylcobinamides (RCbi+s, derivatives of cobalamins which lack the normal axial nucleotide) based on the known differences in steric crowding of the α (“lower”) and β (“upper”) axial ligand positions of cobalt corrinoids. Imidazole binds more tightly than pyridine to both diastereomers of NCCH2Cbi+ and CF3Cbi+, in all cases due to a more favorable entropy change, which is the result of lowered steric interference with corrin side chain thermal motions.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously shown that a coenzyme-B12 analog, adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl)-(e-OH), with the e-propionamide group converted to a carboxylic acid, serves as a poor coenzyme for dioldehydrase. During the course of the catalytic process, the enzyme AdoCbl-(e-OH) complex becomes catalytically inactive (T. Toraya, E. Krodel, A. S. Mildvan, and R. H. Abeles, 1979, Biochemistry18, 417–426). We have now examined the mechanism of this inactivation further. Inactivation only occurs in the presence of substrate. The dioldehydrase coenzyme analog complex is stable in the absence of substrate. In the inactivated complex, the coenzyme analog was stoichiometrically converted to a cob(II)alamin species. The cob-(II)alamin formed remained irreversibly bound at the active site of the enzyme and resisted oxidation by O2 even in the presence of CN?. Stoichiometric formation of 5′-deoxyadenosine from the 5′-deoxy-5′-adenosyl moiety of the coenzyme analog was demonstrated with [8-14C]-AdoCbl(e-OH). This nucleoside also remained tightly bound to the enzyme and was not exchangeable with free 5′-deoxyadenosine nor was it removed by Sephadex chromatography. The rate of inactivation showed no deuterium isotope effect when the inactivation occurred in the presence of l,2-propanediol-l-d2. The inactivated complex was resolved by acid ammonium sulfate treatment into the intact apoenzyme and the hydroxocobalamin derivative. This indicates that the apoenzyme itself is not modified in the inactivation process. These results suggest that the inactivation reaction occurs from one of the intermediates in the normal catalysis. We propose that the inactivation is due to incorrect binding of the modified coenzyme in an intermediate of the catalytic process. This incorrect binding leads to the loss of the substrate radical, and consequently, to loss of catalytic activity.  相似文献   

7.
Four analogs of adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) modified in the d-ribose moiety of the Coβ ligand were synthesized, and their coenzyme properties were studied with diol dehydratase of Klebsiella pneumoniae ATCC 8724. 2′-Deoxyadenosylcobalamin (2′-dAdoCbl) and 3′-deoxyadenosylcobalamin (3′-dAdoCbl) were active as coenzyme. 2′,3′-Secoadenosylcobalamin (2′,3′-secoAdoCbl), an analog bearing the same functional groups as AdoCbl but nicked between the 2′ and 3′ in the ribose moiety, and its 2′,3′-dialdehyde derivative (2′,3′-secoAdoCbl dialdehyde) were totally inactive analogs of the coenzyme. It is therefore evident that the β-d-ribofuranose ring itself, possibly its rigid structure, is essential and much more important than the functional groups of the ribose moiety for coenzyme function (relative importance; β-d-ribofuranose ring ⪢ 3′-OH ⪢ 2′-OH ⪢ ether group). With 2′-dAloCbl and 3′-dAdoCbl as enzymes. an absorption peak at 478 nm appeared during enzymatic reaction, suggesting homolysis of the CCo bound to form cob(II)alamin as intermediate. In the absence of substrate, the complexes of the enzyme with these active analogs underwent rapid inactivation by oxygen. This suggests that their CCo bond is activated even in the absence of substrate by binding to the apoprotein. No significant spectral changes were observed with 2′,3′-secoAdoCbl upon binding to the apoenzyme. In contrast, spectroscopic observation indicates that 2′,3′-secoAdoCbl dialdehyde, another inactive analog, underwent gradual and irreversible cleavage of the CCo bond by interaction with the apodiol dehydratase, forming the enzyme-bound cob(II)alamin without intermediates.  相似文献   

8.
A series of 17 analogs of 5'-deoxy-5'-adenosylcobalamin(adenosylcobalamin) have been synthesized with modifications in the base or ribose moiety of the nucleoside ligand. These analogs have been examined for their effects on reactions catalyzed by the ribonucleotide reductase of Lactobacillus leichmannii. All the analogs are inhibitors of ATP reduction in the presence of adenosylcobalamin as coenzyme, and hence all are bound to the catalytic site. Only the 3-beta-D-ribofuranosyladenine analog (isoadenosylcobalamin) showed substantial activity as a coenzyme in ATP reduction, giving a rate of 59% of that obtained with the adenosylcobalamin. Lesser rates of reduction were obtained with nebularyl-, 2'-deoxyadenosyl-, tubercidyl-, isopropylideneadenosyl-, L-adenosyl-, and ara-adenosylcobalamin, coenzyme activity decreasing in that order. Other analogs showed no significant coenzyme activity. The rate of hydrogen exchange into water from the 5'-methylene group of the nucleoside ligand appeared to parallel the coenzyme activity in those analogs examined, but only the four cobalamins with highest coenzyme activity (adenosyl, isoadenosyl, nebularyl, 2'-deoxyadenosyl) gave detectable amounts of "active coenzyme B12," THe rapidly formed paramagnetic intermediate of ribonucleotide reduction. The enzyme system produced the slowly formed paramagnetic species characterized by a doublet EPR spectrum only with adenosyl- and isoadenosylcobalamin. By contrast the enzymic degradation of analogs to cob(II)alamin and 5'-deoxynucleoside occurred not only with those analogs active as coenzymes and in the exchange reaction but also with a number of coenzymically inactive analogs, and the rate of degradation was unrelated to the rate of ribonucleotide reduction for those analogs with coenzyme activity.  相似文献   

9.
The possible contributions of the mechanochemical triggering effect to the enzymatic activation of the carbon-cobalt bond of coenzyme B12 (5'-deoxyadenosylcobalamin, AdoCbl) for homolytic cleavage have been studied by molecular modeling and semiempirical molecular orbital calculations. Classically, this effect has envisioned enzymatic compression of the axial Co-N bond in the ground state to cause upward folding of the corrin ring and subsequent sterically induced distortion of the Co-C bond leading to its destabilization. The models of this process show that in both methylcobalamin (CH3Cbl) and AdoCbl, compression of the axial Co-N bond does engender upward folding of the corrin ring, and that the extent of such upward folding is smaller in an analog in which the normal 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole axial ligand is replaced by the sterically smaller ligand, imidazole (CH3(lm)Cbl and Ado(lm)Cbl). Furthermore, in AdoCbl, this upward folding of the corrin is accompanied by increases in the carbon-cobalt bond length and in the Co-C-C bond angle (which are also less pronounced in Ado(Im)Cbl), and which indicate that the Co-C bond is indeed destabilized by this mechanism. However, these effects on the Co-C bond are small, and destabilization of this bond by this mechanism is unlikely to contribute more than ca. 3 kcal mol(-1) towards the enzymatic catalysis of Co-C bond homolysis, far short of the observed ca. 14 kcal mol(-1). A second version of mechanochemical triggering, in which compression of the axial Co-N bond in the transition state for Co-C bond homolysis stabilizes the transition state by increased Co-N orbital overlap, has also been investigated. Stretching the Co-C bond to simulate the approach to the transition state was found to result in an upward folding of the corrin ring, a slight decrease in the axial Co-N bond length, a slight displacement of the metal atom from the plane of the equatorial nitrogens towards the "lower" axial ligand, and a decrease in strain energy amounting to about 8 kcal mol(-1) for both AdoCbl and Ado(Im)Cbl. In such modeled transition states, compression of the axial Co-N bond to just below 2.0 A (the distance subsequently found to provide maximal stabilization of the transition state by increased orbital overlap) required about 4 kcal mol(-1) for AdoCbl, and about 2.5 kcal mol(-1) for Ado(Im)Cbl. ZINDO/1 calculations on slightly simplified structures showed that maximal electronic stabilization of the transition state by about 10 kcal mol(-1) occurred at an axial Co-N bond distance of 1.96 A for both AdoCbl and Ado(Im)Cbl. The net result is that this type of transition state mechanochemical triggering can provide 14 kcal mol(-1) of transition state stabilization for AdoCbl, and about 15.5 kcal mol(-1) for the Ado(Im)Cbl, enough to completely explain the observed enzymatic catalysis. These results are discussed in the light of current knowledge about class I AdoCbl-dependent enzymes, in which the coenzyme is bound in its "base-off" conformation, with the lower axial ligand position occupied by the imidazole moiety of an active site histidine residue, and the class II enzymes, in which AdoCbl binds to the enzyme in its "base-on" conformation, and the pendent 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole base remains coordinated to the metal during Co-C bond activation.  相似文献   

10.
In order to elucidate the biosynthesis of the base moiety of cobalamin in Salmonella typhimurium LT2, this organism was grown in the presence of [1′-14C]riboflavin. The vitamin B12 isolated was 14C-labeled. It was shown by chemical degradation that the 14C-label was exclusively localized in carbon atom 2 of the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole moiety. This demonstrated the precursor function of riboflavin in the biosynthesis of 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole in S. typhimurium. Received: 25 August 1998 / Accepted: 27 October 1998  相似文献   

11.
The behavior of two coenzyme analogs, [(5-aden-9-yl)methoxyethyl] cob (III) alamin and [(5-aden-9-yl)pentyl] cob (III) alamin modified at the nucleoside ligand sugar moiety was studied in the system of adenosyl-cobalamin-dependent glycerol dehydratase from Aerobacter aerogenes. It was shown that neither of the analogs possesses coenzyme properties and that both are strong competitive inhibitors for adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl). The affinity of the two analogs for the apoenzyme is higher than that of AdoCbl. The data obtained are indicative of the essential role of the ribofuranoside fragment of AdoCbl in the manifestation of the coenzyme activity. The apoenzyme interaction with the analogs under study is discussed in terms of the Dreiding stereomodels for AdoCbl and its analogs.  相似文献   

12.
Mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase from beef kidney is 50% inhibited after 2 hr treatment with 2.5 mM tetranitromethane at pH 8. Two tyrosine residues per enzyme protomer (46,000 daltons) are modified by the reagent either in the holoenzyme or in the apoenzyme. In both cases the five SH groups titratable with p-mercuribenzoate are not modified by the reagent. However, with a tetranitromethane concentration higher than 2.5 mM and 10 mM mercaptoethanol, an additional tyrosine residue is nitrated in both holo- and apoenzymes. These results are not affected by the presence in the incubation mixture of the substrates alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate both at ten times their Km values. Mercaptoethanol does not impair the recombination of native or nitrated apoenzyme with the coenzyme and does not reduce the coenzyme moiety of native or nitrated holoenzyme, but promotes a conformational change in the nitrated holoenzyme which causes inactivation. Hydrosulfite promotes the reduction of the coenzyme moiety of native and nitro holoenzyme resulting in their inactivation, largely in the nitrated form. The recombination of the coenzyme with native or nitrated apoenzyme is not influenced by hydrosulfite.  相似文献   

13.
S Ramaswamy  D H Park  B V Plapp 《Biochemistry》1999,38(42):13951-13959
When horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase binds coenzyme, a rotation of about 10 degrees brings the catalytic domain closer to the coenzyme binding domain and closes the active site cleft. The conformational change requires that a flexible loop containing residues 293-298 in the coenzyme binding domain rearranges so that the coenzyme and some amino acid residues from the catalytic domain can be accommodated. The change appears to control the rate of dissociation of the coenzyme and to be necessary for installation of the proton relay system. In this study, directed mutagenesis produced the activated Gly293Ala/Pro295Thr enzyme. X-ray crystallography shows that the conformations of both free and complexed forms of the mutated enzyme and wild-type apoenzyme are very similar. Binding of NAD(+) and 2,2, 2-trifluoroethanol do not cause the conformational change, but the nicotinamide ribose moiety and alcohol are not in a fixed position. Although the Gly293Ala and Pro295Thr substitutions do not disturb the apoenzyme structure, molecular modeling shows that the new side chains cannot be accommodated in the closed native holoenzyme complex without steric alterations. The mutated enzyme may be active in the "open" conformation. The turnover numbers with ethanol and acetaldehyde increase 1.5- and 5.5-fold, respectively, and dissociation constants for coenzymes and other kinetic constants increase 40-2,000-fold compared to those of the native enzyme. Substrate deuterium isotope effects on the steady state V or V/K(m) parameters of 4-6 with ethanol or benzyl alcohol indicate that hydrogen transfer is a major rate-limiting step in catalysis. Steady state oxidation of benzyl alcohol is most rapid above a pK of about 9 for V and V/K(m) and is 2-fold faster in D(2)O than in H(2)O. The results are consistent with hydride transfer from a ground state zinc alkoxide that forms a low-barrier hydrogen bond with the hydroxyl group of Ser48.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Background: Diol dehydratase is an enzyme that catalyzes the adenosylcobalamin (coenzyme B12) dependent conversion of 1,2-diols to the corresponding aldehydes. The reaction initiated by homolytic cleavage of the cobalt–carbon bond of the coenzyme proceeds by a radical mechanism. The enzyme is an α2β2γ2 heterooligomer and has an absolute requirement for a potassium ion for catalytic activity. The crystal structure analysis of a diol dehydratase–cyanocobalamin complex was carried out in order to help understand the mechanism of action of this enzyme.Results: The three-dimensional structure of diol dehydratase in complex with cyanocobalamin was determined at 2.2 Å resolution. The enzyme exists as a dimer of heterotrimers (α β γ)2. The cobalamin molecule is bound between the α and β subunits in the ‘base-on’ mode, that is, 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole of the nucleotide moiety coordinates to the cobalt atom in the lower axial position. The α subunit includes a (β/α)8 barrel. The substrate, 1,2-propanediol, and an essential potassium ion are deeply buried inside the barrel. The two hydroxyl groups of the substrate coordinate directly to the potassium ion.Conclusions: This is the first crystallographic indication of the ‘base-on’ mode of cobalamin binding. An unusually long cobalt–base bond seems to favor homolytic cleavage of the cobalt–carbon bond and therefore to favor radical enzyme catalysis. Reactive radical intermediates can be protected from side reactions by spatial isolation inside the barrel. On the basis of unique direct interactions between the potassium ion and the two hydroxyl groups of the substrate, direct participation of a potassium ion in enzyme catalysis is strongly suggested.  相似文献   

16.
Cobalamin (CBL), the biologically active form of vitamin B12, and its analogs, are produced by bacteria only if cobalt supply is adequate. The analogs differ generally by the nucleotide moiety of the molecule. In CBL, 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole (5,6-DMB) is the base in the nucleotide moiety. The present study aimed to determine if a supplement of 5,6-DMB could increase utilization of dietary cobalt for synthesis of CBL and change ruminal fermentation, nutrient digestibility, omasal flow of nutrients and ruminal protozoa counts. Eight ruminally cannulated multiparous Holstein cows (mean±standard deviation=238±21 days in milk and 736±47 kg of BW) were used in a crossover design. Cows were randomly assigned to a daily supplement of a gelatin capsule containing 1.5 g of 5,6-DMB via the rumen cannula or no supplement. Each period lasted 29 days and consisted of 21 days for treatment adaptation and 8 days for data and samples collection. Five corrinoids, CBL and four cobamides were detected in the total mixed ration and the omasal digesta from both treatments. The dietary supplement of 5,6-DMB increased (P=0.02) apparent ruminal synthesis of CBL from 14.6 to 19.6 (s.e.m. 0.8) mg/day but had no effect (P>0.1) on apparent ruminal synthesis of the four analogs. The supplement of 5,6-DMB had no effect (P>0.1) on milk production and composition, or on protozoal count, ruminal pH and concentrations of volatile fatty acids and ammonia nitrogen in rumen content. The supplement had also no effect (P>0.1) on intake, omasal flow and apparent ruminal digestibility of dry matter, organic matter, NDF, ADF and nitrogenous fractions. Plasma concentration of CBL was not affected by treatments (P=0.98). Providing a preformed part of the CBL molecule, that is, 5,6-DMB, increased by 34% the apparent ruminal synthesis of CBL by ruminal bacteria but had no effect on ruminal fermentation or protozoa count and it was not sufficient to increase plasma concentrations of the vitamin. Even though the efficiency of cobalt utilization for apparent synthesis of CBL was increased from 2.0% to 2.7% by the 5,6-DMB supplement, this improved efficiency was still very low. Further research is needed to identify the factors affecting efficiency of utilization of cobalt for synthesis of CBL by the bacterial populations in rumen.  相似文献   

17.
Rat methionine synthase was expressed chiefly as apoenzyme in recombinant baculovirus-infected insect cells (Yamada, K., Tobimatsu, T., and Toraya, T. (1998) Biosci. Biotech. Biochem. 62, 2155-2160). The apoenzyme produced was very unstable, and therefore, after complexation with methylcobalamin, the functional holoenzyme was purified to homogeneity. The specific activity and apparent K(m) values for substrates were in good agreement with those obtained with purified rat liver enzyme. The electronic spectrum of the purified recombinant enzyme resembled that of cob(II)alamin and changed to a methylcobalamin-like one upon incubation of the enzyme with titanium(III) and S-adenosylmethionine. The rate of oxidative inactivation of the enzyme in the absence of S-adenosylmethionine was slower with a stronger reducing agent like titanium(III). The nucleotide moiety, especially the phosphodiester group, was shown to play an important role in the binding of the coenzyme to apoprotein and thus for catalysis. Upon incubation with the apoenzyme in the absence of a reducing agent, cyano- and aquacobalamin were not effective or were effective only slightly in reconstituting holoenzyme. Ethyl- and propylcobalamin formed inactive complexes with apoenzyme, which were converted to holoenzyme by photolytic activation. Adenosylcobalamin was not able to form a complex with apoenzyme, which was convertible to holoenzyme by photoirradiation.  相似文献   

18.
The pathway of vitamin B-12 biosynthesis in anaerobic bacteria differs in several respects from the pathway found in aerobic or aerotolerant microorganisms. The aim of this investigation was to elucidate the formation of the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole part and the amide groups of vitamin B-12 in anaerobic bacteria. [15N]Ammonium chloride or L-[amido-15N]glutamine or a mixture of [15N]ammonium sulfate and [15N]glycine was added to fermentations with Eubacterium limosum. The vitamin B-12 isolated from these fermentations was methylated and degraded to cobinamide and 1,5,6-trimethylbenzimidazole. The amide groups of cobinamide were hydrolyzed and the amide nitrogen of the side chains a, b, c, d, e and g trapped as benzamide. The 15N incorporation was determined by mass spectroscopy. Thus in the experiment with [15N]ammonium chloride the benzamide and the 1,5,6-trimethylbenzimidazole contained 9.6% 15N, whereas in the experiment with L-[amido-15N]glutamine 37.5% of the molecules were 15N labeled. The 1H-NMR spectrum of 1,5,6-trimethylbenzimidazole revealed that the 15N from the ammonium salts and from glutamine was incorporated into N-3 of the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole moiety of vitamin B-12. With a mixture of [15N]ammonium sulfate and [15N]glycine both nitrogens of 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole became 15N-labeled. These experiments demonstrate that in E. limosum the amide nitrogen of glutamine is not only the precursor of the six amide groups of the corrin ring, but also of N-3 of the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole moiety of vitamin B-12.  相似文献   

19.
In anaerobic microorganisms the origin of C atoms 2 and 4-7 of the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole moiety of vitamin B-12 is still unknown. In order to tackle this problem we added several 14C-labeled putative precursors to Eubacterium limosum fermentations. The degradation of the isolated vitamin B-12 revealed that only D-erythrose, 14C-labeled in different positions, was efficiently incorporated into the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole part. The 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole obtained from an experiment with D-[U-14C]erythrose was further degraded. It was found that C-2 was unlabeled, whereas half of the label was located in C-5 plus C-6, and the other half in C-4 plus C-7. These results demonstrate that in E. limosum D-erythrose is a precursor of C-atoms 4, 5, 6 and 7 of the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole part of vitamin B-12.  相似文献   

20.
Several structural analogs of adenosylcobalamin, containing 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 methylene carbons instead of the ribofuranose moiety, have been synthesized and their interaction with ribonucleotide reductase from Lactobacillus leichmannii has been investigated. Kinetic studies of the inhibition of the reductase by these analogs showed that the adeninylalkylcobalamins with 4, 5 and 6 carbons interposed between the adenine moiety and the cobalt atom are potent inhibitors of ribonucleotide reduction. The stronger interaction between adeninylpentylcobalamin and the enzyme than that between adenosylcobalamin and the enzyme suggests that the more flexible acyclic analog of adenosine requires fewer adjustments of the protein upon binding.  相似文献   

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