The temperature dependence of the kinetics of the rapid, reversible cleavage of the carbon−cobalt
bond of 5‘-deoxyadenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl, coenzyme B12) catalyzed by the ribonucleotide triphosphate
reductase (RTPR) of Lactobacillus leichmannii has been studied by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. At a
given temperature and constant concentration of AdoCbl, the observed rate constants, k
obs, are essentially
independent of the initial concentration of RTPR, but the spectral change, and hence the amount of cob(II)alamin formed at equilibrium, shows a hyperbolic dependence on [RTPR]0. This is interpreted as being a
consequence of the known relatively weak binding of AdoCbl to the enzyme so that increasing enzyme
concentration drives the binding equilibrium toward enzyme−coenzyme complex. Fitting the absorbance change
data to a binding isotherm gives values of the binding equilibrium constant, K
b, and the maximal absorbance
change obtainable when the coenzyme is “saturated” with enzyme. From the latter value and the difference
in molar absorptivity of AdoCbl and cob(II)alamin, the concentration of enzyme-bound cob(II)alamin, and
consequently the equilibrium constant, K
eq, for its formation from enzyme-bound AdoCbl, can be calculated.
These values of K
eq have been used to deconvolute the forward, k
f, and reverse, k
r, rate constants from the
measured k
obs values for cob(II)alamin formation at the active site. The enzyme is found to catalyze the
Co−C bond homolysis of AdoCbl by a factor of 1.6 × 109 (ΔΔG
⧧ = 13 kcal mol-1) at 37 °C. Eyring plots
of k
f and van't Hoff plots of K
eq both show distinct discontinuities at about 32 °C which may indicate the
formation of an inactive, or less active, conformer at lower temperature or a change in mechanism. The
activation parameters for the forward rate constant for cob(II)alamin in the upper temperature regime (ΔH
f
⧧
= 20 ± 1 kcal mol-1, ΔS
f
⧧ = 13 ± 4 cal mol-1 K-1) show that the entropy of activation is essentially the
same as that for the nonenzymatic thermal homolysis of AdoCbl, but the enthalpy of activation is 13 ± 2 kcal
mol-1 lower. The enzyme thus appears to catalyze the Co−C bond cleavage reaction entirely enthalpically.
Several possibilities for the enthalpic catalysis of AdoCbl homolysis by RTPR are discussed.