Kinetic studies on the reaction of Cob(II) Alamin with hypochlorous acid: evidence for one electron oxidation of the metal center and corrin ring destruction

Abstract

Kinetic and mechanistic studies on the reaction of a major intracellular vitamin B12 form, cob(II)alamin (Cbl(II)), with hypochlorous acid/hypochlorite (HOCl/OCl−) have been carried out. Cbl(II) (Co(II)) is rapidly oxidized by HOCl to predominately aquacobalamin/hydroxycobalamin (Cbl(III), Co(III)) with a second-order rate constant of 2.4 × 107 M− 1 s− 1 (25.0 °C). The stoichiometry of the reaction is 1:1. UHPLC/HRMS analysis of the product mixture of the reaction of Cbl(II) with 0.9 mol equiv. HOCl provides support for HOCl being initially reduced to Clradical dot and subsequent H atom abstraction from the corrin macrocycle occurring, resulting in small amounts of corrinoid species with two or four H atoms fewer than the parent cobalamin. Upon the addition of excess (H)OCl further slower reactions are observed. Finally, SDS-PAGE experiments show that HOCl-induced damage to bovine serum albumin does not occur in the presence of Cbl(II), providing support for Cbl(II) being an efficient HOCl trapping agent.

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Rohan S. Dassanayake, Mohamed M. Farhath, Jacob T. Shelley, Soumitra Basu, Nicola E. Brasch. Elsevier, Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry Volume 163, October 2016, Pages 81-87.

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