|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Protein Domain : Precorrin-3B C17-methyltransferase domain

Primary Identifier  IPR006363 Type  Domain
Short Name  Cbl_synth_CobJ/CibH_dom
description  This entry represents a domain found in CobJ and CbiH precorrin-3B C(17)-methyltransferase (). In the aerobic pathway, once CobG has generated precorrin-3b, CobJ catalyses the methylation of precorrin-3b at C-17 to form precorrin-4 (the extruded methylated C-20 fragment is left attached as an acyl group at C-1) []. In the corresponding anaerobic pathway, CbiH carries out this ring contraction, using cobalt-precorrin-3b as a substrate to generate a tetramethylated delta-lactone []. In Mycobacterium this domain fuses with the Pprecorrin-2 C(20)-methyltransferase domain () into a bifunctional enzyme known as cobIJ. These proteins belong to the superfamily of tetrapyrrole (corrin/porphyrin) methylases (), which includes methylases that use S-adenosylmethionine (S-AdoMet) in the methylation of diverse substrates. A number of other methylases in the cobalamin biosynthesis pathway also belong to this domain superfamily (precorrin-3 methylase, , , amongst others), and a fusion of precorrin-3B C17-methyltransferases with precorrin isomerase is represented by .Nomenclature note: precorrin-3B C17-methyltransferase is one of the two methyltransferases often referred to as precorrin-3 methylase (the other is precorrin-4 C11-methyltransferase, ).Cobalamin (vitamin B12) is a structurally complex cofactor, consisting of a modified tetrapyrrole with a centrally chelated cobalt. Cobalamin is usually found in one of two biologically active forms: methylcobalamin and adocobalamin. Most prokaryotes, as well as animals, have cobalamin-dependent enzymes, whereas plants and fungi do not appear to use it. In bacteria and archaea, these include methionine synthase, ribonucleotide reductase, glutamate and methylmalonyl-CoA mutases, ethanolamine ammonia lyase, and diol dehydratase []. In mammals, cobalamin is obtained through the diet, and is required for methionine synthase and methylmalonyl-CoA mutase []. There are at least two distinct cobalamin biosynthetic pathways in bacteria []:Aerobic pathway that requires oxygen and in which cobalt is inserted late in the pathway []; found in Pseudomonas denitrificans and Rhodobacter capsulatus.Anaerobic pathway in which cobalt insertion is the first committed step towards cobalamin synthesis [, ]; found in Salmonella typhimurium, Bacillus megaterium, and Propionibacterium freudenreichii subsp. shermanii. Either pathway can be divided into two parts: (1) corrin ring synthesis (differs in aerobic and anaerobic pathways) and (2) adenosylation of corrin ring, attachment of aminopropanol arm, and assembly of the nucleotide loop (common to both pathways) []. There are about 30 enzymes involved in either pathway, where those involved in the aerobic pathway are prefixed Cob and those of the anaerobic pathway Cbi. Several of these enzymes are pathway-specific: CbiD, CbiG, and CbiK are specific to the anaerobic route of S. typhimurium, whereas CobE, CobF, CobG, CobN, CobS, CobT, and CobW are unique to the aerobic pathway of P. denitrificans.

0 Child Features

1 Parent Features

0 Protein Domain Regions