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1.
The reactions of aquacobalamin (Cbl(III)H2O, vitamin B12a) and reduced cobalamin (Cbl(II), vitamin B12r) with the nitrosothiols S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) and S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) were studied in aqueous solution at pH 7.4. UV-vis and NMR spectroscopic studies and semiquantitative kinetic investigations indicated complex reactivity patterns for the studied reactions. The detailed reaction routes depend on the oxidation state of the cobalt center in cobalamin, as well as on the structure of the nitrosothiol. Reactions of aquacobalamin with GSNO and SNAP involve initial formation of Cbl(III)-RSNO adducts followed by nitrosothiol decomposition via heterolytic S-NO bond cleavage. Formation of Cbl(III)(NO-) as the main cobalamin product indicates that the latter step leads to efficient transfer of the NO- group to the Co(III) center with concomitant oxidation of the nitrosothiol. Considerably faster reactions with Cbl(II) proceed through initial Cbl(II)-RSNO intermediates, which undergo subsequent electron-transfer processes leading to oxidation of the cobalt center and reduction of the nitrosothiol. In the case of GSNO, the overall reaction is fast (k approximately 1.2 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1)) and leads to formation of glutathionylcobalamin (Cbl(III)SG) and nitrosylcobalamin (Cbl(III)(NO-)) as the final cobalamin products. A mechanism involving the reversible equilibrium Cbl(II) + RSNO <==> Cbl(III)SR + NO is suggested for the reaction on the basis of the obtained kinetic and mechanistic information. The corresponding reaction with SNAP is considerably slower and occurs in two distinct reaction steps, which result in the formation of Cbl(III)(NO-) as the ultimate cobalamin product. The significantly different kinetic and mechanistic features observed for the reaction of GSNO and SNAP illustrate the important influence of the nitrosothiol structure on its reactivity toward metal centers of biomolecules. The potential biological implications of the results are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The 4-coordinate, low-spin cob(I)alamin (Co1+Cbl) species, which can be obtained by heterolytic cleavage of the Co-C bond in methylcobalamin or the two-electron reduction of vitamin B12, is one of the most powerful nucleophiles known to date. The supernucleophilicity of Co1+Cbl has been harnessed by a number of cobalamin-dependent enzymes, such as the B12-dependent methionine synthase, and by enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of B12, including the human adenosyltransferase. The nontoxic nature of the Co1+Cbl supernucleophile also makes it an attractive target for the in situ bioremediation of halogenated waste. To gain insight into the geometric, electronic, and vibrational properties of this highly reactive species, electronic absorption, circular dichroism (CD), magnetic CD, and resonance Raman (rR) spectroscopies have been employed in conjunction with density functional theory (DFT), time-dependent DFT, and combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics computations. Collectively, our results indicate that the supernucleophilicity of Co1+Cbl can be attributed to the large destabilization of the Co 3dz2-based HOMO and its favorable orientation with respect to the corrin macrocycle, which minimizes steric repulsion during nucleophilic attack. An intense feature in the CD spectrum and a prominent peak in the rR spectra of Co1+Cbl have been identified that may serve as excellent probes of the nucleophilic character, and thus the reactivity, of Co1+Cbl in altered environments, including enzyme active sites. The implications of our results with respect to the enzymatic formation and reactivity of Co1+Cbl are discussed, and spectroscopic trends along the series from Co3+Cbls to Co2+Cbl and Co1+Cbl are explored.  相似文献   

3.
The PduO-type adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP):corrinoid adenosyltransferase from Lactobacillus reuteri (LrPduO) catalyzes the transfer of the adenosyl-group of ATP to Co(1+)cobalamin (Cbl) and Co(1+)cobinamide (Cbi) substrates to synthesize adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) and adenosylcobinamide (AdoCbi(+)), respectively. Previous studies revealed that to overcome the thermodynamically challenging Co(2+) → Co(1+) reduction, the enzyme drastically weakens the axial ligand-Co(2+) bond so as to generate effectively four-coordinate (4c) Co(2+)corrinoid species. To explore how LrPduO generates these unusual 4c species, we have used magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic techniques. The effects of active-site amino acid substitutions on the relative yield of formation of 4c Co(2+)corrinoid species were examined by performing eight single-amino acid substitutions at seven residues that are involved in ATP-binding, an intersubunit salt bridge, and the hydrophobic region surrounding the bound corrin ring. A quantitative analysis of our MCD and EPR spectra indicates that the entire hydrophobic pocket below the corrin ring, and not just residue F112, is critical for the removal of the axial ligand from the cobalt center of the Co(2+)corrinoids. Our data also show that a higher level of coordination among several LrPduO amino acid residues is required to exclude the dimethylbenzimidazole moiety of Co(II)Cbl from the active site than to remove the water molecule from Co(II)Cbi(+). Thus, the hydrophilic interactions around and above the corrin ring are more critical to form 4c Co(II)Cbl than 4c Co(II)Cbi(+). Finally, when ATP analogues were used as cosubstrate, only "unactivated" five-coordinate (5c) Co(II)Cbl was observed, disclosing an unexpectedly large role of the ATP-induced active-site conformational changes with respect to the formation of 4c Co(II)Cbl. Collectively, our results indicate that the level of control exerted by LrPduO over the timing for the formation of the 4c Co(2+)corrinoid intermediates is even more exquisite than previously anticipated.  相似文献   

4.
The electron-transfer reaction between reduced cobalamin (Cbl(II)) and sodium pentacyanonitrosylferrate(II) (sodium nitroprusside, NP), as well as the subsequent processes following the electron-transfer step, were investigated by spectroscopic (UV-vis, (1)H NMR, EPR), electrochemical (CV, DPV) and kinetic (stopped-flow) techniques. In an effort to clarify the complex reaction pattern observed at physiological pH, systematic spectroscopic and kinetic studies were undertaken as a function of pH (1.8-9) and NP concentration (0.0001 - 0.09 M). The kinetics of the electron-transfer reaction was studied under pseudo-first-order conditions with respect to NP. The reaction occurs in two parallel paths of different order, viz. pseudo-first and pseudo-second order with respect to the NP concentration, respectively. The contribution of each path depends on pH and the [NP]/[Cbl(II)] ratio. At low pH and total NP concentration (pH < 3, [NP]/[Cbl(II)] approximately 1), the cyano-bridged successor complex [Cbl(III)-(mu-NC)-Fe(I)(CN)(3)(NO(+))](-) (1(s)()) is the final reaction product formed in an inner-sphere electron transfer reaction that is coupled to the release of cyanide from coordinated nitroprusside. At higher pH, subsequent reactions were observed which involve the attack of cyanide released in the electron transfer step on the initially formed cyano-bridged species, and lead to the formation of Cbl(III)CN and [Fe(I)(CN)(4)(NO(+))](2)(-). The strong dependence of the rate and mechanism of the subsequent reactions on pH is attributed to the large variation in the effective nucleophilicity of the cyanide ligand in the studied pH range. An alternative electron-transfer pathway observed in the presence of excess NP involves the reaction of the precursor complex [Cbl(II)-(mu-NC)-Fe(II)(CN)(4)(NO(+))](2)(-) (1(p)()) with NP to give [Cbl(III)-(mu-NC)-Fe(II)(CN)(4)(NO(+))](-) (2) and reduced nitroprusside, [Fe(CN)(5)NO](3)(-), as the initial reaction products. Analysis of the kinetic data allowed elucidation of the rate constants for the inner- and outer-sphere electron-transfer pathways. The main factors which influence the kinetics and thermodynamics of the observed electron-transfer steps are discussed on the basis of the spectroscopic, kinetic and electrochemical results. A general picture of the reaction pathways that occur on a short (s) and long (min to h) time scale as a function of pH and relative reactant concentrations is derived from the experimental data. In addition, the release of NO resulting from the one-electron reduction of NP by Cbl(II) was monitored with the use of a sensitive NO electrode. The results obtained in the present study are discussed in reference to the possible influence of cobalamin on the pharmacological action of nitroprusside.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of the reaction between one-electron-reduced cobalamin (cobalamin(II), Cb(II)) and the two-electron-oxidized form of vitamin C (dehydroascorbic acid, DHA) with amino acids in an acidic medium is studied by conventional UV–Vis spectroscopy. It is shown that the oxidation of Cbl(II) by dehydroascorbic acid proceeds only in the presence of sulfur-containing amino acids (cysteine, acetylcysteine). A proposed reaction mechanism includes the step of amino acid coordination on the Co(II)-center through the sulfur atom, along with that of the interaction between this complex and DHA molecules, which results in the formation of ascorbyl radical and the corresponding Co(III) thiolate complex.  相似文献   

6.
Despite decades of research, the mechanism by which coenzyme B12 (adenosylcobalamin, AdoCbl)-dependent enzymes promote homolytic cleavage of the cofactor's Co-C bond to initiate catalysis has continued to elude researchers. In this work, we utilized magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy to explore how the electronic structure of the reduced B12 cofactor (i.e., the post-homolysis product Co2+ Cbl) is modulated by the enzyme methylmalonyl-CoA mutase. Our data reveal a fairly uniform stabilization of the Co 3d orbitals relative to the corrin pi/pi*-based molecular orbitals when Co2+ Cbl is bound to the enzyme active site, particularly in the presence of substrate. Contrastingly, our previous studies (Brooks, A. J.; Vlasie, M.; Banerjee, R.; Brunold, T. C. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 8167-8180.) showed that when AdoCbl is bound to the MMCM active site, no enzymatic perturbation of the Co3+ Cbl electronic structure occurs, even in the presence of substrate (analogues). Collectively, these observations provide direct evidence that enzymatic Co-C bond activation involves stabilization of the post-homolysis product, Co2+ Cbl, rather than destabilization of the Co3+ Cbl "ground" state.  相似文献   

7.
The activation of cobalamin requires the reduction of Cbl(III) to Cbl(II). The reduction by glutathione and dithiothreitol was followed using visible spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance. In addition the oxidation of glutathione was monitored. Glutathione first reacts with oxidized Cbl(III). The binding of a second glutathione required for the reduction to Cbl(II) is presumably located in the dimethyl benzimidazole ribonucleotide ligand cavity. The reduction of Cbl(III) by dithiothreitol, which contains two thiols, is much faster even though no stable Cbl(III) complex is formed. The reduction, by both thiol reagents, results in the formation of thiyl radicals, some of which are released to form oxidized thiol products and some of which remain associated with the reduced cobalamin. In the reduced state the intrinsic lower affinity for the benzimidazole base, coupled with a trans effect from the initial GSH bound to the β-axial site and a possible lowering of the pH results in an equilibrium between base-on and base-off complexes. The dissociation of the base facilitates a closer approach of the thiyl radical to the Co(II) α-axial site resulting in a complex with ferromagnetic exchange coupling between the metal ion and the thiyl radical. This is a unique example of 'internal spin trapping' of a thiyl radical formed during reduction. The finding that the reduction involves a peripheral site and that thiyl radicals produced during the reduction remain associated with the reduced cobalamin provide important new insights into our understanding of the formation and function of cobalamin enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics of the reaction between the two-electron reduced form of cobalamin (super-reduced cobalamin, cob(I)alamin, or Cbl(I)) and sodium selenite in an alkaline medium is studied spectrophotometrically. It is shown that the selenite rapidly oxidizes Cbl(I) to cob(II)alamin (Cbl(II)). It is established that the active form of the oxidant is the protonated selenite anion (HSeO3-), which receives six electrons during the reaction and transforms into HSe. The reactions of cob(I)alamin oxidation by selenite and sulfite are compared.  相似文献   

9.
Co(2+)cobalmain (Co(2+)Cbl) is implicated in the catalytic cycles of all adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl)-dependent enzymes, as in each case catalysis is initiated through homolytic cleavage of the cofactor's Co-C bond. The rate of Co-C bond homolysis, while slow for the free cofactor, is accelerated by 12 orders of magnitude when AdoCbl is bound to the protein active site, possibly through enzyme-mediated stabilization of the post-homolysis products. As an essential step toward the elucidation of the mechanism of enzymatic Co-C bond activation, we employed electronic absorption (Abs), magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), and resonance Raman spectroscopies to characterize the electronic excited states of Co(2+)Cbl and Co(2+)cobinamide (Co(2+)Cbi(+), a cobalamin derivative that lacks the nucleotide loop and 5,6-dimethylbenzimazole (DMB) base and instead binds a water molecule in the lower axial position). Although relatively modest differences exist between the Abs spectra of these two Co(2+)corrinoid species, MCD data reveal that substitution of the lower axial ligand gives rise to dramatic changes in the low-energy region where Co(2+)-centered ligand field transitions are expected to occur. Our quantitative analysis of these spectral changes within the framework of time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations indicates that corrin-based pi --> pi transitions, which dominate the Co(2+)corrinoid Abs spectra, are essentially insulated from perturbations of the lower ligand environment. Contrastingly, the Co(2+)-centered ligand field transitions, which are observed here for the first time using MCD spectroscopy, are extremely sensitive to alterations in the Co(2+) ligand environment and thus may serve as excellent reporters of enzyme-induced perturbations of the Co(2+) state. The power of this combined spectroscopic/computational methodology for studying Co(2+)corrinoid/enzyme active site interactions is demonstrated by the dramatic changes in the MCD spectrum as Co(2+)Cbi(+) binds to the adenosyltransferase CobA.  相似文献   

10.
Zheng D  Yan L  Birke RL 《Inorganic chemistry》2002,41(9):2548-2555
Electrochemistry and Raman spectroscopy have shown that aquocob(III)alamin (Cbl(III)) can be reduced by nitric oxide (NO) to form Cbl(II) on an electrode surface. The Cbl(II) formed in this way can bind NO to form nitrosyl-cobalamin, Cbl(II)-NO, which is reduced to form Cbl(I) at about -1.0 V vs a KCl saturated Ag/AgCl reference electrode. In addition, nitrite was found to bind both Cbl(III) and Cbl(II) and a binding constant of 3.5 x 10(2) M(-1) was measured for (NO(2)-Cbl(II))(1-). UV-vis spectrophotometry and mass spectroscopy were used to show that Cbl(I) reduces NO to form Cbl(II)-NO and N(2)O and N(2), and this reaction is involved in the cyclic voltammetry of cobalamin in the presence of excess NO where a catalytic reduction of NO occurs involving the cycling of Cbl(II)-NO/Cbl(I). This redox couple is also involved in the electrochemical catalytic reduction of nitrite. These results can be used to explain a number of physiological effects involving NO interaction in biological systems with added cobalamin or with cobalamin in the methionine synthase enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Synthetic Co(III) complexes containing N5 donor sets undergo glutathionylation to generate biomimetic species of glutathionylcobalamin (GSCbl), an important form of cobalamin (Cbl) found in nature. For this study, a new Co(III) complex was synthesized derived from the polypyridyl pentadentate N5 ligand N4PyCO(2)Me (1). The compound [Co(N4PyCO(2)Me)Cl]Cl(2) (3) was characterized by X-ray crystallography, UV-vis, IR, (1)H NMR, and (13)C NMR spectroscopies and mass spectrometry (HRMS). Reaction of 3 with glutathione (GSH) in H(2)O generates the biomimetic species [Co(N4PyCO(2)Me)(SG)](2+) (5), which was generated in situ and characterized by UV-vis and (1)H NMR spectroscopies and HRMS. (1)H NMR and UV-vis spectroscopic data are consistent with ligation of the cysteine thiolate of GSH to the Co(III) center of 5, as occurs in GSCbl. Kinetic analysis indicated that the substitution of chloride by GS(-) occurs by a second-order process [k(1) = (10.1 ± 0.7) × 10(-2) M(-1) s(-1)]. The observed equilibrium constant for formation of 5 (K(obs) = 870 ± 50 M(-1)) is about 3 orders of magnitude smaller than for GSCbl. Reaction of the Co(III) complex [Co(Bn-CDPy3)Cl]Cl(2) (4) with GSH generates glutathionylated species [Co(Bn-CDPy3)(GS)](2+) (6), analogous to 5. Glutathionylation of 4 occurs at a similar rate [k(2) = (8.4 ± 0.5) × 10(-2) M(-1) s(-1)], and the observed equilibrium constant (K(obs) = 740 ± 47 M(-1)) is slightly smaller than for 5. Glutathionylation showed a significant pH dependence, where rates increased with pH. Taken together, these results suggest that glutathionylation is a general reaction for Co(III) complexes related to Cbl.  相似文献   

12.
The equilibria and kinetics of substitution of the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole at the alpha site of beta-(N-methylimidazolyl)cobalamin by N-methylimidazole have been investigated, and the product, bis(N-methylimidazolyl)cobalamin, has been characterized by visible and 1H NMR spectroscopies. The equilibrium constant for (N-MeIm)Cbl+ + N-MeIm right harpoon over left harpoon (N-MeIm)2Cbl+ was determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy (9.6 +/- 0.1 M(-1), 25.0 degrees C, I = 1.5 M (NaClO4)). The observed rate constant for this reaction exhibits an unusual inverse dependence on N-methylimidazole concentration, and it is proposed that substitution occurs via a base-off solvent-bound intermediate. Activation parameters typical for a dissociative ligand substitution mechanism are reported at two different N-MeImT concentrations, 5.00 x 10(-3) M (DeltaH++ = 99 +/- 2 kJ x mol(-1), DeltaS++ = 39 +/- 5 J x mol(-1) x K(-1), DeltaV++ = 15.0 +/- 0.7 cm3 x mol(-1), and 1.00 M (DeltaH++ = 109.4 +/- 0.8 kJ x mol(-1), DeltaS++ = 70 +/- 3 J x mol(-1) x K(-1), DeltaV++ = 16.8 +/- 1.1 cm3 x mol(-1)). According to the proposed mechanism, these parameters correspond to the equation of (N-MeIm)2Cbl+ and the ring-opening reaction of the alpha-DMBI of (N-MeIm)Cbl+ to give the solvent-bound intermediate in both cases, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
CobA from Salmonella enterica is a member of an enzymatic system responsible for the de novo biosynthesis of adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl), catalyzing the formation of the essential Co-C bond by transferring the adenosyl group from a molecule of ATP to a transient Co(1+)corrinoid species generated in the enzyme active site. A particularly fascinating aspect of this reaction is that the flavodoxin in vivo reducing agent that serves as the electron donor to CobA possesses a reduction potential that is considerably more positive than that of the Co(2+/1+) couple of the corrinoid substrate. To explore how CobA may overcome this challenge, we have employed electronic absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopies to probe the interaction between Co(3+)- and Co(2+)corrinoids and the enzyme active site. Our data reveal that while Co(3+)corrinoids interact only weakly with CobA, Co(2+)corrinoids undergo partial conversion to a new paramagnetic species that can be obtained in nearly quantitative yield when CobA is preincubated with the co-substrate ATP. This "activated" species is characterized by a distinct set of ligand field transitions in the near-IR spectral region and EPR parameters that are unprecedented for Co(2+)corrinoids. Analysis of these data on the basis of qualitative spectral correlations and density functional theory computations reveals that this unique Co(2+)corrinoid species possesses an essentially square-planar Co(2+) center that lacks any significant axial bonding interactions. Possible implications of these findings for the mechanism of Co(2+) --> Co(1+) reduction employed by CobA and Co-C bond-forming enzymes in general are explored.  相似文献   

14.
The reaction between aquacobalamin, Cbl(H2O), and NO was studied at low pH. As previously reported, the final product of the reaction is the same as that obtained in the reaction of NO and reduced Cbl(H2O), viz. Cbl(NO-). Nevertheless, this reductive nitrosylation is preceded by a faster reaction (accompanied by small absorbance changes) that depends on the HNO2 concentration but not on the NO concentration. Kinetic and UV-vis spectroscopic data show that Cbl(NO2-) is generated during this reaction. Spectroscopic data show that the dimethylbenzimidazole group trans to the NO2- ligand is protonated and partially dechelated at pH 1, by which a reaction with NO is induced. DFT calculations were performed to compare the ability of NO and NO2- to bind to cobalamin and their influence on the stability of the dimethylbenzimidazole group. The reductive nitrosylation reaction shows a quadratic dependence on the HNO2 concentration and an inverse dependence on the NO concentration. It also strongly depends on pH and is no longer observed at pH > 4. On the basis of earlier work performed on a series of Co(III) porphyrins, a mechanism is proposed that can quantitatively account for the HNO2 and NO dependencies. The reductive nitrosylation reaction is practically dominated by a back reaction, i.e., the reaction between Cbl(NO-) and HNO2, which accounts for the strange NO and HNO2 concentration dependencies observed.  相似文献   

15.
Methyl transfer reactions are important in a number of biochemical pathways. An important class of methyltransferases uses the cobalt cofactor cobalamin, which receives a methyl group from an appropriate methyl donor protein to form an intermediate organometallic methyl-Co bond that subsequently is cleaved by a methyl acceptor. Control of the axial ligation state of cobalamin influences both the mode (i.e., homolytic vs heterolytic) and the rate of Co-C bond cleavage. Here we have studied the axial ligation of a corrinoid iron-sulfur protein (CFeSP) that plays a key role in energy generation and cell carbon synthesis by anaerobic microbes, such as methanogenic archaea and acetogenic bacteria. This protein accepts a methyl group from methyltetrahydrofolate forming Me-Co(3+)CFeSP that then donates a methyl cation (Me) from Me-Co(3+)CFeSP to a nickel site on acetyl-CoA synthase. To unambiguously establish the binding scheme of the corrinoid cofactor in the CFeSP, we have combined resonance Raman, magnetic circular dichroism, and EPR spectroscopic methods with computational chemistry. Our results clearly demonstrate that the Me-Co3+ and Co2+ states of the CFeSP have an axial water ligand like the free MeCbi+ and Co(2+)Cbi+ cofactors; however, the Co-OH2 bond length is lengthened by about 0.2 angstroms for the protein-bound cofactor. Elongation of the Co-OH2 bond of the CFeSP-bound cofactor is proposed to make the cobalt center more "Co1+-like", a requirement to facilitate heterolytic Co-C bond cleavage.  相似文献   

16.
Cobalamin (Cbl, vitamin B12) consists of two moieties: (i) the corrin ring with the central Co-ion in the oxidation states Co3+/2+/1+ and (ii) the nucleotide side chain. The lower position of the ring is typically occupied by the nucleotide base (Bzm), whereas the upper surface coordinates exchangeable ligands. We have found that amino-tetrazole can coordinate to H2O · Cbl (Co3+) with Kd = 10−5-10−6 M. A specific group (presumably tetrazole, TZ) can be easily created in CNBr-activated Sepharose by treatment with . The prepared matrix (STZ) contained ≈10 mM of the active groups, which bound H2O · corrinoids with Kd = 10−5-10−6 M. Stability of STZ-Cbl bonds gradually increased and reached Kd = 10−7 M over 10-20 h (20 °C, pH 6-7). This effect can be ascribed to partial displacement of Bzm and coordination of TZ to the lower position. The binding was most efficient at pH 4-7 and low ionic strength, yet, noticeable adsorption took place even at extreme conditions, pH 1-9 and I = 0-2 M. Reduced corrins (Co2+) also exhibited high affinity for STZ. The bound ligands could be eluted as H2O · Cbl (pH 0), HO · Cbl (pH 14) or diCN · Cbl (pH 9-12, CN). The adsorbent is applicable for one-step purification of corrins from a crude extract; separation of aquo- and diaquo-forms; specific capturing of H2O · Cbl from a mixture containing organo-Cbls or protein-bound Cbl, analysis of peptide-Cbl dissociation kinetics, etc.  相似文献   

17.
The distribution of radio-labelled cobalamins in Streptomyces griseus grown in medium containing 57Co-cobalt chloride has been estimated by two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography and bioautography. 57Co-Methylocobalamin (Me[57Co]Cbl) was the major form in the mycelium together with smaller amounts of 57Co-adenosylcobalamin (Ado[57Co]Cbl) and 57Co-hydroxocobalamin (OH[57Co]Cbl). The OH[57Co]Cbl was detected in three forms having, respectively, anionic, cationic and neutral properties. A simple technique has been developed to isolate and purify Me[57Co]Cbl and Ado[57Co]Cbl from the mycelium using column chromatography on ion-exchange celluloses. Small quantities of each cobalamin coenzyme have been obtained at 90--96% purity and specific activities of 190--230 muCi/microgram.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The reduced form of aquacobalamin binds nitric oxide very effectively to yield a nitrosyl adduct, Cbl(II)-NO. UV-vis, (1)H-, (31)P-, and (15)N NMR data suggest that the reaction product under physiological conditions is a six-coordinate, "base-on" form of the vitamin with a weakly bound alpha-dimethylbenzimidazole base and a bent nitrosyl coordinated to cobalt at the beta-site of the corrin ring. The nitrosyl adduct can formally be described as Cbl(III)-NO-. The kinetics of the binding and dissociation reactions was investigated by laser flash photolysis and stopped-flow techniques, respectively. The activation parameters, DeltaH, DeltaS, and DeltaV, for the forward and reverse reactions were estimated from the effect of temperature and pressure on the kinetics of these reactions. For the "on" reaction of Cbl(II) with NO, the small positive DeltaS and DeltaV values suggest the operation of a dissociative interchange (I(d)) substitution mechanism at the Co(II) center. Detailed laser flash photolysis and (17)O NMR studies provide evidence for the formation of water-bound intermediates in the laser flash experiments and strongly support the proposed I(d) mechanism. The kinetics of the "off" reaction was studied using an NO-trapping technique. The respective activation parameters are also consistent with a dissociative interchange mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MMCM) is an enzyme that utilizes the adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) cofactor to catalyze the rearrangement of methylmalonyl-CoA to succinyl-CoA. Despite many years of dedicated research, the mechanism by which MMCM and related AdoCbl-dependent enzymes accelerate the rate for homolytic cleavage of the cofactor's Co-C bond by approximately 12 orders of magnitude while avoiding potentially harmful side reactions remains one of the greatest subjects of debate among B(12) researchers. In this study, we have employed electronic absorption (Abs) and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopic techniques to probe cofactor/enzyme active site interactions in the Co(3+)Cbl "ground" state for MMCM reconstituted with both the native cofactor AdoCbl and its derivative methylcobalamin (MeCbl). In both cases, Abs and MCD spectra of the free and enzyme-bound cofactor are very similar, indicating that replacement of the intramolecular base 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole (DMB) by a histidine residue from the enzyme active site has insignificant effects on the cofactor's electronic properties. Likewise, spectral perturbations associated with substrate (analogue) binding to holo-MMCM are minor, arguing against substrate-induced enzymatic Co-C bond activation. As compared to the AdoCbl data, however, Abs and MCD spectral changes for the sterically less constrained MeCbl cofactor upon binding to MMCM and treatment of holoenzyme with substrate (analogues) are much more substantial. Analysis of these changes within the framework of time-dependent density functional theory calculations provides uniquely detailed insight into the structural distortions imposed on the cofactor as the enzyme progresses through the reaction cycle. Together, our results indicate that, although the enzyme may serve to activate the cofactor in its Co(3+)Cbl ground state to a small degree, the dominant contribution to the enzymatic Co-C bond activation presumably comes through stabilization of the Co(2+)Cbl/Ado. post-homolysis products.  相似文献   

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