Abstract

In humans, cobalamin or vitamin B12 is delivered to two target enzymes via a complex intracellular trafficking pathway comprising transporters and chaperones. CblC (or MMACHC) is a processing chaperone that catalyzes an early step in this trafficking pathway. CblC removes the upper axial ligand of cobalamin derivatives, forming an intermediate in the pathway that is subsequently converted to the active cofactor derivatives. Mutations in the cblC gene lead to methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria. Here, we report that nitrosylcobalamin (NOCbl), which was developed as an antiproliferative reagent, and is purported to cause cell death by virtue of releasing nitric oxide, is highly unstable in air and is rapidly oxidized to nitrocobalamin (NO2Cbl). We demonstrate that CblC catalyzes the GSH-dependent denitration of NO2Cbl forming 5-coordinate cob(II)alamin, which had one of two fates. It could be oxidized to aquo-cob(III)alamin or enter a futile thiol oxidase cycle forming GSH disulfide. Arg-161 in the active site of CblC suppressed the NO2Cbl-dependent thiol oxidase activity, whereas the disease-associated R161G variant stabilized cob(II)alamin and promoted futile cycling. We also report that CblC exhibits nitrite reductase activity, converting cob(I)alamin and nitrite to NOCbl. Finally, the denitration activity of CblC supported cell proliferation in the presence of NO2Cbl, which can serve as a cobalamin source. The newly described nitrite reductase and denitration activities of CblC extend its catalytic versatility, adding to its known decyanation and dealkylation activities. In summary, upon exposure to air, NOCbl is rapidly converted to NO2Cbl, which is a substrate for the B12 trafficking enzyme CblC.

Highlights

  • In humans, cobalamin or vitamin B12 is delivered to two target enzymes via a complex intracellular trafficking pathway comprising transporters and chaperones

  • We report that nitrosylcobalamin (NOCbl), which was developed as an antiproliferative reagent, and is purported to cause cell death by virtue of releasing nitric oxide, is highly unstable in air and is rapidly oxidized to nitrocobalamin (NO2Cbl)

  • We report that CblC exhibits nitrite reductase activity, converting cob(I)alamin and nitrite to NOCbl

Read more

Summary

CblC processes nitrocobalamin

Whether the cobalt is or is not coordinated by the endogenous DMB base on the lower (or a) face of the corrin ring. NO and cob(II)alamin, each with an unpaired electron, react rapidly to form NOCbl [20, 21]. We demonstrate that in vitro, CblC binds NOCbl tightly and stabilizes it against air oxidation. Neither thiols nor reductants remove the nitrosyl group from CblC-bound NOCbl. In contrast, nitrite is eliminated from CblC-bound NO2Cbl in the presence of GSH, forming cob(II)alamin or OH2Cbl under anaerobic or aerobic conditions, respectively. NO2Cbl processing by CblC is accompanied by oxidation of GSH to GSSG, which is exacerbated by the pathogenic R161G mutation. Our study demonstrates that NO2Cbl supports cell proliferation, consistent with the ability of CblC to process it

Results and discussion
Nitrite reductase activity of CblC
Wildtype CbC
Synthesis of nitrosylcobalamin
Synthesis of nitrocobalamin
Expression and purification of CblC
Isothermal titration calorimetry
Quantification of GSSG by a coupled GSH reductase assay
EPR spectroscopy
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call