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  2. The many faces of vitamin B12: catalysis by cobalamin-dependent enzymes

The many faces of vitamin B12: catalysis by cobalamin-dependent enzymes

  • Annu Rev Biochem. 2003;72:209-47. doi: 10.1146/annurev.biochem.72.121801.161828.
Ruma Banerjee 1 Stephen W Ragsdale
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0664, USA. rbanerjee1@unl.edu; sragsdale1@unl.edu
Abstract

Vitamin B12 is a complex organometallic cofactor associated with three subfamilies of enzymes: the adenosylcobalamin-dependent isomerases, the methylcobalamin-dependent methyltransferases, and the dehalogenases. Different chemical aspects of the cofactor are exploited during catalysis by the isomerases and the methyltransferases. Thus, the cobalt-carbon bond ruptures homolytically in the isomerases, whereas it is cleaved heterolytically in the methyltransferases. The reaction mechanism of the dehalogenases, the most recently discovered class of B12 enzymes, is poorly understood. Over the past decade our understanding of the reaction mechanisms of B12 enzymes has been greatly enhanced by the availability of large amounts of Enzyme that have afforded detailed structure-function studies, and these recent advances are the subject of this review.

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