Structural highlights
Function
[METH_ECOLI] Catalyzes the transfer of a methyl group from methyl-cobalamin to homocysteine, yielding enzyme-bound cob(I)alamin and methionine. Subsequently, remethylates the cofactor using methyltetrahydrofolate.
Evolutionary Conservation
Check, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf.
Publication Abstract from PubMed
The crystal structure of a 27-kilodalton methylcobalamin-containing fragment of methionine synthase from Escherichia coli was determined at 3.0 A resolution. This structure depicts cobalamin-protein interactions and reveals that the corrin macrocycle lies between a helical amino-terminal domain and an alpha/beta carboxyl-terminal domain that is a variant of the Rossmann fold. Methylcobalamin undergoes a conformational change on binding the protein; the dimethylbenzimidazole group, which is coordinated to the cobalt in the free cofactor, moves away from the corrin and is replaced by a histidine contributed by the protein. The sequence Asp-X-His-X-X-Gly, which contains this histidine ligand, is conserved in the adenosylcobalamin-dependent enzymes methylmalonyl-coenzyme A mutase and glutamate mutase, suggesting that displacement of the dimethylbenzimidazole will be a feature common to many cobalamin-binding proteins. Thus the cobalt ligand, His759, and the neighboring residues Asp757 and Ser810, may form a catalytic quartet, Co-His-Asp-Ser, that modulates the reactivity of the B12 prosthetic group in methionine synthase.
How a protein binds B12: A 3.0 A X-ray structure of B12-binding domains of methionine synthase.,Drennan CL, Huang S, Drummond JT, Matthews RG, Ludwig ML Science. 1994 Dec 9;266(5191):1669-74. doi: 10.1126/science.7992050. PMID:7992050[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
References
- ↑ Drennan CL, Huang S, Drummond JT, Matthews RG, Ludwig ML. How a protein binds B12: A 3.0 A X-ray structure of B12-binding domains of methionine synthase. Science. 1994 Dec 9;266(5191):1669-74. doi: 10.1126/science.7992050. PMID:7992050 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.7992050