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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2006, p. 7331-7334, Vol. 188, No. 21
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00918-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Fine-Tuning Our Knowledge of the Anaerobic Route to Cobalamin (Vitamin B12)
Charles A. Roessner* and
A. Ian Scott
Center for Biological NMR, Department of Chemistry, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-3255

INTRODUCTION
Three recent papers (by Roessner et al. [
12], Kajiwara et al.
[
5], and Santander et al. [
14]) report the use of a combination
of genetic engineering, enzymology, bio-organic chemistry, and
high-resolution NMR spectroscopy to help fine-tune what is known
of the anaerobic pathway to cobalamin. They present new experiments
that firmly establish the structures of two intermediates of
the pathway and confirm the functions of 5 more of the 13
cbi gene-encoded enzymes that contribute to the conversion of precorrin-2
to adenosyl-cobinamide (Fig.
1). (For the purpose of this minireview,
the anaerobic pathway between uroporphyrinogen III and adenosyl-cobinamide
involving the
cbi gene products only is shown. For the two most
recent reviews of cobalamin biosynthesis, please see references
16 and
19. The complete aerobic and anaerobic pathways from
uroporphyrinogen III to adenosylcobalamin may be seen and downloaded
at
http://people.tamu.edu/
c-roessner.)
Roth et al. (
13) first published in 1993 the sequence of a single
large
cob operon containing most of the genes for the anaerobic
biosynthesis of cobalamin in
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium,
including the 13
cbi genes that encode the enzymes necessary
for the conversion of precorrin-2 to adenosyl-cobinamide (Cbi).
The functions of CbiA, -B, -C, -D, -E, -T, -F, -G, -H, -J, -K,
-L, and -P for this part of the anaerobic pathway were assigned,
in large part, based on similarity to counterparts in the corresponding
aerobic (oxygen-dependent) pathway of
Pseudomonas denitrificans,
which had been more extensively characterized (
1,
2,
3,
7,
10,
17). However, experimental evidence existed for the functions
of only 4 (CbiB, -H, -K, and -L) of the 13 catalytic Cbi proteins.
(There are 17
cbi-encoded proteins in the operon, but CbiM,
-N, -Q, and -O are believed to compose a cobalt transport system.)
Biochemical evidence has shown that CbiK is a chelatase that
inserts cobalt into precorrin-2 (
9), that CbiL is the C-20 methyltransferase
for the conversion of cobalt-precorrin-2 to cobalt-precorrin-3
(
11), and that CbiH catalyzes methylation at C-17 of cobalt-precorrin-3,
resulting in the formation of the ring-contracted, lactonized
cobalt-precorrin-4 (
15). (In some organisms, CbiK is replaced
by either CysG or CbiX as the cobaltochelatase. There also may
be some variation in the oxidation state of the di- and trimethylated
intermediates, since factor II and factor III, the oxidized
forms of precorrin-2 and precorrin-3, can also be used as substrates
in the in vitro systems described in reference
5.) In addition,
genetic evidence (
8) has suggested that CbiB is involved in
the coupling of the aminopropanol group to adenosyl-cobyric
acid to form adenosyl-cobinamide, but the functions of the remaining
nine Cbi enzymes between precorrin-2 and adenosyl-cobinamide
have proved elusive. Especially intriguing are two enzymes,
CbiD and CbiG, whose activities could not be predicted because
of lack of similarity to any other proteins of known function.
The three recent papers mentioned above now provide experimental
evidence for the functions of CbiA, CbiD, CbiF, CbiG, and CbiT
and reveal the structures of two new intermediates in the pathway,
cobalt-precorrin-5A and -5B.

CbiF METHYLATES COBALT-PRECORRIN-4 TO FORM COBALT-PRECORRIN-5A
Roessner et al. predicted in 1992 (
11) that CbiF (and, thus,
CobM of the aerobic pathway) was the C-11 methyltransferase
necessary for the transformation of cobalt-precorrin-4 to cobalt-precorrin-5
because of its ability to mismethylate precorrin-3 at C-11.
However, the mismethylation activity of CbiF and the extraordinary
sensitivity of the CbiF methylation products to oxidation (
14)
greatly complicated the isolation of intermediates subsequent
to cobalt-precorrin-4. Kajiwara et al. (
5) were able to synthesize,
purify, and characterize cobalt-precorrin-5A (Fig.
1), the product
resulting from the CbiF-catalyzed methylation of cobalt-precorrin-4
at C-11, by the careful elimination of oxygen not only from
the in vitro incubations containing cobalt, precorrin-3, CbiH,
and CbiF but also during the isolation procedures.

CbiG OPENS THE LACTONE RING AND DEACYLATES COBALT-PRECORRIN-5A TO AFFORD COBALT-PRECORRIN-5B
Unlike the equivalent precorrin-5 of the aerobic pathway, cobalt-precorrin-5A
still carries the

-lactone that formed as a consequence of C-17
methylation and ring contraction. The deacylated product, cobalt-precorrin-5B
(Fig.
1), was observed by Kajiwara et al. (
5) only when CbiG
was included in the incubation mixture described above. Thus,
the function of CbiG can now be assigned as catalyzing both
the opening of the lactone ring and the extrusion of the two-carbon
fragment (deacylation) derived from C-20 and its associated
methyl group. The acyl group has been shown to be eliminated
as acetaldehyde (
18).
The observation that CobE of the aerobic pathway (whose function is unknown) shows some similarity to the carboxyl terminal of CbiG suggests that it, too, may be involved in opening of the lactone ring or deacylation. CobE was not required for the in vitro biosynthesis of precorrin-6A (10), but the deacylation of precorrin-5 was the least efficient step in the multienzyme synthesis of precorrin-6A. It may be that CobE facilitates this process.

CbiD IS NECESSARY FOR C-1 METHYLATION
In the aerobic pathway, deacylation is concomitant with C-1
methylation, catalyzed by CobF. The anaerobic pathway has no
methyltransferase similar to CobF, but the paper by Roessner
et al. (
12) provides evidence that CbiD is required for C-1
methylation and thus may be a nonorthologous methyltransferase
that takes the place of CobF in the anaerobic pathway. In this
work, a strain of
Escherichia coli was genetically engineered
to contain the 12
S. enterica genes believed to be required
for the biosynthesis of cobyric acid (all of the
cbi genes except
cbiB). This strain accumulated cobyrinic acid
a,
c-diamide (Fig.
1). However, a mutant of the strain constructed to lack only
the
cbiD gene accumulated a similar product that was still protonated,
rather than methylated, at the C-1 position (1-desmethyl-cobyrinic
acid
a,
c-diamide) (Fig.
1). Even though the cobalt-precorrin-6A
intermediate has yet to be isolated, and there is some mystery
as to why the presence of the two amidating enzymes, CbiA and
CbiP, was necessary for C-1 methylation, the engineered system
has provided the first solid evidence that CbiD is required.
CbiD has a potential
S-adenosyl-
L-methionine binding site and
so is probably the actual methyltransferase, but it could also
work in conjunction with one of the other methyltransferases,
e.g., CbiF. The structure of CbiD from
Archaeoglobus fulgidus has been determined but provided no clues to its activity (unpublished
information available from the Protein Data Bank website,
http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/cgi/explore.cgi?pdbId=1SR8).

CbiT IS BOTH A C-15 METHYLTRANSFERASE AND A DECARBOXYLASE
In the aerobic pathway, methylation at C-5 and C-15 and decarboxylation
of the C-12 acetate side chain of precorrin-6B are catalyzed
by a single enzyme, CobL. In
S. enterica, however, CobL is split
into two separate enzymes, CbiE and CbiT. Because of the similarity
of CbiE to other methyltransferases of the B
12 pathway, it has
long been assumed that CbiE is the methyltransferase that catalyzes
the addition of the two methyl groups to cobalt-precorrin-6B
and that CbiT then decarboxylates the C-12 acetate side chain
to afford cobalt-precorrin 8. However, the structure of CbiT
(
6) and its similarity to methyltransferases not of the B
12 pathway have led to the suggestion that it, too, might be a
methyltransferase. The paper by Santander et al. (
14) provides
the first experimental evidence that CbiT alone can catalyze
both methylation at C-15 and decarboxylation of the C-12 acetate
side chain, even in the absence of C-1 methylation. The products
synthesized from cobalt-precorrin-3 in the presence of CbiF,
CbiG, CbiH, and CbiT were methylated at C-15 or were methylated
at C-15 and decarboxylated, but they were never decarboxylated
without C-15 methylation. This result suggests that CbiT catalyzes
C-15 methylation first, followed by decarboxylation. In the
absence of CbiT, neither methylation at C-15 nor decarboxylation
was observed. If CbiT is the C-15 methyltransferase, then CbiE
remains as the C-5 methyltransferase. Figure
1 depicts the CbiE-catalyzed
methylation at C-5 as occurring before the action of CbiT, but
this order needs to be confirmed.

CbiA IS THE a AND c SIDE-CHAIN AMIDASE
The paper by Roessner et al. (
12) reported a genetically engineered
strain of
E. coli containing 10
cbi genes (all
cbi genes except
cbiA,
cbiB, and
cbiP) that accumulated 1-desmethyl-cobyrinic
acid. The addition of the
cbiA gene to this strain resulted
in the accumulation of a bisamidated product (1-desmethyl-cobyrinic
acid
a,
c-diamide) (Fig.
1), showing that CbiA is responsible
for amidation of the two side chains. In addition, CbiA from
S. enterica has been overexpressed, and its mechanism of action
has been studied in detail (
4), providing conclusive evidence
that it is the
a,
c-amidase.

CONCLUDING REMARKS
Experimental evidence is now in hand for the functions of 9
(CbiA, -B, -D, -T, -F, -G, -H, -K, and -L) of the 13 Cbi enzymes.
The confirmation of the predicted activities of CbiC, CbiE,
CbiJ, and CbiP and the biosynthesis and confirmation of the
structures of cobalt-precorrin-6A, -6B, -7, and -8 remain among
the final challenges (along with the synthesis of dimethybenzimidazole
and attachment of the lower ligand) in determining the anaerobic
pathway to cobalamin. CbiJ has been assigned the function of
the reduction of cobalt-precorrin-6A to cobalt-precorrin-6B
(Fig.
1) based on its similarity to CobK, which catalyzes the
reduction of precorrin-6A to precorrin-6B in the aerobic pathway
and, as described above, CbiE is the most likely candidate for
the C-5 methyltransferase for the conversion of cobalt-precorrin-6B
to cobalt-precorrin-7. CbiT probably catalyzes the conversion
of cobalt-precorrin-7 to cobalt-precorrin-8, and catalysis of
the conversion of cobalt-precorrin-8 to cobyrinic acid (Fig.
1) has been assigned to CbiC based on its similarity to CobH
of the aerobic pathway. In addition, CobH can substitute for
CbiC in a genetically engineered strain of
E. coli (
12) that
synthesizes 1-desmethyl-cobyrinic acid (C. A. Roessner, unpublished
results), confirming its function as the precorrin-8 methylmutase.
CbiP has been assigned the function of amidation of the
b,
d,
e, and
g side chains based on its similarity to CbiA and CobQ,
which performs the same function in the aerobic pathway. The
functions of the Cbi enzymes are summarized in Table
1.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank John Roth (University of California, Davis) for generously
providing us with the plasmids bearing the
cbi genes at an early
stage of our investigations.
Our work is supported by the National Institutes of Health (MERIT award DK32034 to A.I.S.) and the Robert A. Welch Foundation.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Center for Biological NMR, Department of Chemistry, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-3255. Phone: (979) 845-8985. Fax: (979) 845-5992. E-mail:
c-roessner{at}tamu.edu.

Published ahead of print on 25 August 2006. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2006, p. 7331-7334, Vol. 188, No. 21
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00918-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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