Members of the COG0523 subfamily of candidate GTPase metallochaperones function in bacterial transition-metal homeostasis, but the nature of the cognate metal, mechanism of metal transfer, and identification of target protein(s) for metal delivery remain open questions. Here, we explore the multifunctionality of members of the subfamily linked to delivering Zn II to apoprotein targets under conditions of host-imposed transition-metal depletion. We examine two zinc-uptake repressor (Zur)-regulated COG0523 family members, each from a major human pathogen, Acinetobacter baumannii (AbZigA) and Staphylococcus aureus (SaZigA), in an effort to develop a model for Zn II metallochaperone activity. Zn II chelator competition experiments reveal one highaffinity (K Zn1 ≈ 10 10-10 11 M −1) metal-binding site in each GTPase, while AbZigA and SaZigA are characterized by an additional one and two (lower-affinity) metal-binding sites, respectively. Co II titrations reveal that both metallochaperones have similar electronic absorption characteristics that indicate the presence of two tetrahedral metal coordination sites. High-affinity metal binding at the CXCC motif activates the GTPase activity of both enzymes, with Zn II more effective than Co II. Both GTPases bind the product, GDP, more tightly in the apoprotein than the Zn II-bound state and exhibit what is best described as a "locked" conformation around the GTP substrate. Negative thermodynamic linkage is observed between nucleotide binding and metal binding, leading to a new mechanistic model for COG0523-catalyzed metal delivery.