Cobalt-Sulfur Coordination Chemistry Drives B 12 Loading onto Methionine Synthase.
Romila MascarenhasArkajit GuhaZhu LiMarkus RuetzSojin AnJavier SeravalliRuma BanerjeePublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Cobalt-sulfur (Co-S) coordination is labile to both oxidation and reduction chemistry and is rarely seen in nature. Cobalamin (or vitamin B 12 ) is an essential cobalt-containing organometallic cofactor in mammals and is escorted via an intricate network of chaperones to a single cytoplasmic target, methionine synthase. In this study, we report that the human cobalamin trafficking protein, MMADHC, exploits the chemical lability of Co-S coordination for cofactor off-loading onto methionine synthase. Cys-261 on MMADHC serves as the β-axial ligand to cobalamin. Complex formation between MMADHC and methionine synthase is signaled by loss of the lower axial nitrogen ligand, leading to five-coordinate thiolato-cobalamin. Nucleophilic displacement by the vicinal thiolate, Cys-262, completes cofactor transfer to methionine synthase and release of a cysteine disulfide-containing MMADHC. The physiological relevance of this mechanism is supported by clinical variants of MMADHC, which impair cofactor binding and off-loading, explaining the molecular basis of the associated homocystinuria.