COBALAMIN (COENZYME B12): Synthesis and Biological Significance
This review examines deoxyadenosylcobalamin (Ado-B 12 ) biosynthesis, transport, use, and uneven distribution among living forms. We describe how genetic analysis of enteric bacteria has contributed to these issues. Two pathways for corrin ring formation have been found-an aerobic pathway (in P. den...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annual review of microbiology 1996-01, Vol.50 (1), p.137-181 |
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Zusammenfassung: | This review examines deoxyadenosylcobalamin (Ado-B
12
)
biosynthesis, transport, use, and uneven distribution among living forms. We
describe how genetic analysis of enteric bacteria has contributed to these
issues. Two pathways for corrin ring formation have been found-an aerobic
pathway (in
P. denitrificans
) and an anaerobic pathway (in
P.
shermanii
and
S. typhimurium
)-that differ in the point of
cobalt insertion. Analysis of B
12
transport in
E. coli
reveals two systems: one (with two proteins) for the outer membrane, and one
(with three proteins) for the inner membrane. To account for the uneven
distribution of B
12
in living forms, we suggest that the
B
12
synthetic pathway may have evolved to allow anaerobic
fermentation of small molecules in the absence of an external electron
acceptor. Later, evolution of the pathway produced siroheme, (allowing use of
inorganic electron acceptors), chlorophyll (O
2
production), and heme
(aerobic respiration). As oxygen became a larger part of the atmosphere, many
organisms lost fermentative functions and retained dependence on newer,
B
12
functions that did not involve fermentation. Paradoxically,
Salmonella
spp. synthesize B
12
only anaerobically but can use
B
12
(for degradation of ethanolamine and propanediol) only with
oxygen. Genetic analysis of the operons for these degradative functions
indicate that anaerobic degradation is important. Recent results suggest that
B
12
can be synthesized and used during anaerobic respiration using
tetrathionate (but not nitrate or fumarate) as an electron acceptor. The branch
of enteric taxa from which
Salmonella
spp. and
E. coli
evolved
appears to have lost the ability to synthesize B
12
and the ability
to use it in propanediol and glycerol degradation.
Salmonella
spp., but
not
E. coli
, have acquired by horizontal transfer the ability to
synthesize B
12
and degrade propanediol. The acquired ability to
degrade propanediol provides the selective force that maintains B
12
synthesis in this group. |
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ISSN: | 0066-4227 1545-3251 |
DOI: | 10.1146/annurev.micro.50.1.137 |