meso-Bromination of cyano- and aquacobalamins facilitates their processing into Co(II)-species by glutathione.
Ilia A Dereven'kovVladimir S OsokinIlya A KhodovValentina V SobornovaNikita A ErshovSergei V MakarovPublished in: Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry (2023)
Cyanocobalamin (CNCbl), a medicinal form of vitamin B 12 , is resistant to glutathione (GSH), and undergoes intracellular processing via reductive decyanation producing the Co(II)-form of Cbl (Cbl(II)) mediated by the CblC-protein. Alteration of the CblC-protein structure might inhibit CNCbl processing. Here, we showed that introducing a bromine atom to the C10-position of the CNCbl corrin ring facilitates its reaction with GSH leading to the formation of Cbl(II) and cyanide dissociation. In a neutral medium, the reaction between C10-Br-CNCbl and GSH proceeds via the complexation of the reactants further leading to dimethylbenzimidazole (DMBI) substitution and electron transfer from GSH to the Co(III)-ion. The reaction is accelerated upon the GSH thiol group deprotonation. The key factors explaining the higher reactivity of C10-Br-CNCbl compared with unmodified CNCbl towards GSH are increasing the electrode potential of CNCbl two-electron reduction upon meso-bromination and the substantial labilization of DMBI, which was shown by comparing their reactions with cyanide and the pK a values of DMBI protonation (pK a base-off ). Aquacobalamin (H 2 OCbl) brominated at the C10-position of the corrin reacts with GSH to give Cbl(II) via GSH complexation and subsequent reaction of this complex with a second GSH molecule, whereas unmodified H 2 OCbl generates glutathionyl-Cbl, which is resistant to further reduction by GSH.