Literature DB >> 11375680

Synthesis, characterization, solution stability, and X-ray crystal structure of the thiolatocobalamin gamma-glutamylcysteinylcobalamin, a dipeptide analogue of glutathionylcobalamin: insights into the enhanced Co-S bond stability of the natural product glutathionylcobalamin.

R K Suto1, N E Brasch, O P Anderson, R G Finke.   

Abstract

Glutathionylcobalamin (gamma-glutamylcysteinylglycinylcobalamin; gamma-GluCysGly-Cbl) is a natural product which functions as an intermediate in the biosynthesis of the active B(12) coenzymes adenosylcobalamin and methylcobalamin. Of interest to the present studies is glutathionylcobalamin's unique stability in comparison to other thiolatocobalamins, notably the > or =6 x 10(4) fold less stable cysteinylcobalamin, Cys-Cbl. In order to determine which parts of the glutathione tripeptide contribute to the overall stability of glutathionylcobalamin, two cysteine-containing dipeptides, which are truncated versions of glutathione, were used to synthesize their corresponding cobalamins, specifically gamma-glutamylcysteinylCbl (gamma-GluCys-Cbl) and cysteinylglycinylcobalamin (CysGly-Cbl). As with glutathionylCbl, the dipeptide gamma-GluCys-Cbl forms a stable thiolatocobalamin. However and most interestingly, CysGly-Cbl is observed to be unstable much like Cys-Cbl. The results require that the extra stability of glutathionylcobalamin and its congeners, compared to cysteinylcobalamin and its analogues, must be derived from destabilization by the gamma-NH(3)(+) group in cysteinylcobalamin, or stabilization by the gamma-NHC(=O)- amide linkage in glutathionylcobalamin, or both. To probe any ground-state structural basis for the possible stabilization in gamma-GluCys-containing cobalamins, gamma-GluCys-Cbl was crystallized and yielded the first X-ray structural determination of a true thiolatocobalamin, and only the second structure of a cobalamin containing a Co-S bond, the first example being Randaccio and co-workers' 1999 structure of the thioketone complex, thioureacobalamin, (NH(2))(2)CSCbl. Key features of the structure of gamma-glutamylcysteinylcobalamin include (i) a normal Co-S bond length of 2.267(2) A, (ii) a Co-N(axial) bond length of 2.049(6) A, (iii) two alternate conformations of the gamma-glutamylcysteinyl moiety, and (iv) folding of the corrin ring upward by 24.2 degrees, the highest degree of folding yet observed for a cobalamin. These results do not show any strong stabilization (e.g., no shortened Co-S bond), although it is not clear for certain what the effect is (stabilizing or destabilizing) of the elongated Co-N(axial) bond; instead, the crystallographic results suggest that the metastable Cys-Cbl probably has a Co-S cleavage transition state that is stabilized (along with, possibly, any ground-state destabilization of the Co-S bond). Overall, the results strongly suggest that placing a positive charge on the gamma-NH(3)(+) stabilizes the Co-S bond cleavage transition state, thereby setting the stage for the needed full thermolysis product and kinetic studies-as a function of the axial-base on-off equilibrium-that will be required to understand in even greater detail the unique stability of glutathionyl- (gamma-glutamylcysteinylglycinyl-) and gamma-glutamylcysteinylcobalamins.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11375680     DOI: 10.1021/ic001365n

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inorg Chem        ISSN: 0020-1669            Impact factor:   5.165


  8 in total

1.  Redetermination of the X-ray structure of nitroxylcobalamin: base-on nitroxylcobalamin exhibits a remarkably long Co-N(dimethylbenzimidazole) bond distance.

Authors:  Hanaa A Hassanin; Mohamed F El-Shahat; Serena DeBeer; Clyde A Smith; Nicola E Brasch
Journal:  Dalton Trans       Date:  2010-10-04       Impact factor: 4.390

2.  Internal Spin Trapping of Thiyl Radical during the Complexation and Reduction of Cobalamin with Glutathione and Dithiothrietol.

Authors:  Somasundaram Ramasamy; Tapan Kumar Kundu; William Antholine; Periakaruppan T Manoharan; Joseph M Rifkind
Journal:  J Porphyr Phthalocyanines       Date:  2012-01-01       Impact factor: 1.811

3.  The X-ray crystal structure of glutathionylcobalamin revealed.

Authors:  Luciana Hannibal; Clyde A Smith; Donald W Jacobsen
Journal:  Inorg Chem       Date:  2010-11-01       Impact factor: 5.165

4.  A simple, convenient method to synthesize cobalamins: synthesis of homocysteinylcobalamin, N-acetylcysteinylcobalamin, 2-N-acetylamino-2-carbomethoxyethanethiolatocobalamin, sulfitocobalamin and nitrocobalamin.

Authors:  Edward Suarez-Moreira; Luciana Hannibal; Clyde A Smith; Roberto A Chavez; Donald W Jacobsen; Nicola E Brasch
Journal:  Dalton Trans       Date:  2006-09-21       Impact factor: 4.390

5.  Characterization of the complex between native and reduced bovine serum albumin with aquacobalamin and evidence of dual tetrapyrrole binding.

Authors:  Ilia A Dereven'kov; Luciana Hannibal; Sergei V Makarov; Anna S Makarova; Pavel A Molodtsov; Oskar I Koifman
Journal:  J Biol Inorg Chem       Date:  2018-05-02       Impact factor: 3.358

6.  Fluorophore Assisted Photolysis of Thiolato-Cob(III)alamins.

Authors:  Zachary L Rodgers; Thomas A Shell; Alexander M Brugh; Hannah L Nowotarski; Malcolm D E Forbes; David S Lawrence
Journal:  Inorg Chem       Date:  2016-02-05       Impact factor: 5.165

7.  The return of the Scarlet Pimpernel: cobalamin in inflammation II - cobalamins can both selectively promote all three nitric oxide synthases (NOS), particularly iNOS and eNOS, and, as needed, selectively inhibit iNOS and nNOS.

Authors:  Carmen Wheatley
Journal:  J Nutr Environ Med       Date:  2007-09

8.  Cobalamin in inflammation III - glutathionylcobalamin and methylcobalamin/adenosylcobalamin coenzymes: the sword in the stone? How cobalamin may directly regulate the nitric oxide synthases.

Authors:  Carmen Wheatley
Journal:  J Nutr Environ Med       Date:  2008-01-10
  8 in total

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