Electron addition to alkyl cobalamins, coenzyme B12 and vitamin B12. A radiolytic and electron spin resonance study
Abstract
Exposure of dilute solutions of methyl and ethyl cobalamins and coenzyme B12 in dilute solutions (D2O + CD3OD) to 60Co γ-rays at 77 K gave a single broad feature in the free-spin region assigned to electron-capture species with the excess electron largely confined to a π* corrin orbital. On warming above 77 K the methyl derivative gave a novel species with spectral features characteristic of an unpaired electron in the Co(dx2–y2) orbital. The other two substrates gave spectra due to CoII B12r, both on warming and after photolyses with visible light.
The acetyl derivative gave an electron-capture species whose e.s.r. spectrum was characteristic of an electron in the Co(dz2) orbital, which on warming above 77 K changed to the normal CoII B12r spectrum. The cyano derivative (vitamin B12) gave electron addition into the Co(dz2) orbital, as evidenced by the large hyperfine coupling to 13C from 13CN ligands. On annealing, cyanide ions were lost irreversibly, B12r being detected by e.s.r. spectroscopy. In contrast, the dicyano derivative on electron addition at 77 K gave a species containing only one 13CN ligand. Hence in this case one CN– ligand was lost at 77 K, with no return of the dimethylbenzimidazole ligand.
These results are discussed in terms of a new mechanism for electron-addition to alkyl cobalamins.