posted on 2017-09-26, 00:00authored bySebastian Goetzl, Christian Teutloff, Tobias Werther, Sandra E. Hennig, Jae-Hun Jeoung, Robert Bittl, Holger Dobbek
B12-dependent proteins
are involved in methyl transfer reactions
ranging from the biosynthesis of methionine in humans to the formation
of acetyl-CoA in anaerobic bacteria. During their catalytic cycle,
they undergo large conformational changes to interact with various
proteins. Recently, the crystal structure of the B12-containing corrinoid
iron–sulfur protein (CoFeSP) in complex with its reductive
activator (RACo) was determined, providing a first glimpse of how
energy is transduced in the ATP-dependent reductive activation of
corrinoid-containing methyltransferases. The thermodynamically uphill
electron transfer from RACo to CoFeSP is accompanied by large movements
of the cofactor-binding domains of CoFeSP. To refine the structure-based
mechanism, we analyzed the conformational change of the B12-binding
domain of CoFeSP by pulsed electron–electron double resonance
and Förster resonance energy transfer spectroscopy. We show
that the site-specific labels on the flexible B12-binding domain and
the small subunit of CoFeSP move within 11 Å in the RACo:CoFeSP
complex, consistent with the recent crystal structures. By analyzing
the transient kinetics of formation and dissociation of the RACo:CoFeSP
complex, we determined values of 0.75 μM–1 s–1 and 0.33 s–1 for rate constants kon and koff, respectively.
Our results indicate that the large movement observed in crystals
also occurs in solution and that neither the formation of the protein
encounter complex nor the large movement of the B12-binding domain
is rate-limiting for the ATP-dependent reductive activation of CoFeSP
by RACo.