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Structure-Based Demystification of Radical Catalysis by a Coenzyme B 12 Dependent Enzyme-Crystallographic Study of Glutamate Mutase with Cofactor Homologues.

Karl GruberVanessa CsitkovitsAndrzej ŁyskowskiChristoph KratkyBernhard Kräutler
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Catalysis by radical enzymes dependent on coenzyme B 12 (AdoCbl) relies on the reactive primary 5'-deoxy-5'adenosyl radical, which originates from reversible Co-C bond homolysis of AdoCbl. This bond homolysis is accelerated roughly 10 12 -fold upon binding the enzyme substrate. The structural basis for this activation is still strikingly enigmatic. As revealed here, a displaced firm adenosine binding cavity in substrate-loaded glutamate mutase (GM) causes a structural misfit for intact AdoCbl that is relieved by the homolytic Co-C bond cleavage. Strategically interacting adjacent adenosine- and substrate-binding protein cavities provide a tight caged radical reaction space, controlling the entire radical path. The GM active site is perfectly structured for promoting radical catalysis, including "negative catalysis", a paradigm for AdoCbl-dependent mutases.
Keyphrases
  • structural basis
  • binding protein
  • blood brain barrier
  • single cell