The structure of the rat vitamin B12 transporter TC and its complex with glutathionylcobalamin

Journal home page for Journal of Biological ChemistryAuthor links open overlay panel, , , , , , , , , Abstract

Vitamin B12 (cobalamin or Cbl) functions as a cofactor in two important enzymatic processes in human cells, and life is not sustainable without it. B12 is obtained from food and travels from the stomach, through the intestine and into the bloodstream by three B12-transporting proteins: salivary haptocorrin (HC), gastric intrinsic factor (IF) and transcobalamin (TC), which all bind B12 with high affinity and require proteolytic degradation to liberate Cbl. After intracellular delivery of dietary B12, Cbl in the aquo/hydroxo-Cbl (HOCbl) form can coordinate various nucleophiles, e.g., glutathione (GSH), giving rise to glutathionylcobalamin (GSCbl), a naturally-occurring form of vitamin B12. Currently there is no data showing whether GSCbl is recognized and transported in the human body. Our crystallographic data shows for the first time the complex between a vitamin B12-transporter and GSCbl, which compared to HOCbl, binds TC equally well. Furthermore, sequence analysis and structural comparisons show that TC recognizes and transports GSCbl and that the residues involved are conserved among TCs from different organisms. Interestingly, HC and IF are not structurally tailored to bind GSCbl. This study provides new insights into the interactions between TC and Cbl.

Keywords

vitamin B12

cobalamin

glutathione

complex

transcobalamin

vitamin transport

AbbreviationsGSCbl

glutathionylcobalamin

HOCbl

hydrxocobalamin (vitamin B12)

IF

gastric intrinsic factor

© 2024 THE AUTHORS. Published by Elsevier Inc on behalf of American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.

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