Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences | Vol.242, Issue.1229 | | Pages 228-263
The Structure of Vitamin B$_{12}$ I. An Outline of the Crystallographic Investigation of Vitamin B$_{12}$
The structure of vitamin B$_{12}$ has been examined by the X-ray analysis of four different crystal structures, air-dried and wet vitamin B$_{12}$, the selenocyanate derivative of B$_{12}$, and a hexacarboxylic acid prepared by the degradation of the vitamin by Cannon, Johnson and Todd. The analysis turned on the possibility of identifying some of the atomic positions in the molecule in very confused appproximate electron density distributions calculated using only evidence of cobalt or cobalt and selenium contributions to phase the terms employed in the calculation. The recognition of atomic sites depended on a general knowledge of atomic sizes and geometry, on chemical evidence of the existence of a nucleotide-like group in the B$_{12}$ crystals, and on the presence, immediately surrounding each cobalt atom, of a nucleus which was identical in very different crystals. Once the positions of the atoms in the nucleus and nucleotide were identified, the refinement of the electron density distributions in the different crystals proceeded in a fairly direct manner to establish the arrangement of all the remaining atoms in the molecules. The atomic arrangements found lead to the deduction of the chemical structure of a large part of the vitamin B$_{12}$ molecule and of the stereochemical organization of the whole. Of particular interest is the evident relation of the molecular nucleus found to porphyrins of type III and to porphobilinogen.
Original Text (This is the original text for your reference.)
The Structure of Vitamin B$_{12}$ I. An Outline of the Crystallographic Investigation of Vitamin B$_{12}$
The structure of vitamin B$_{12}$ has been examined by the X-ray analysis of four different crystal structures, air-dried and wet vitamin B$_{12}$, the selenocyanate derivative of B$_{12}$, and a hexacarboxylic acid prepared by the degradation of the vitamin by Cannon, Johnson and Todd. The analysis turned on the possibility of identifying some of the atomic positions in the molecule in very confused appproximate electron density distributions calculated using only evidence of cobalt or cobalt and selenium contributions to phase the terms employed in the calculation. The recognition of atomic sites depended on a general knowledge of atomic sizes and geometry, on chemical evidence of the existence of a nucleotide-like group in the B$_{12}$ crystals, and on the presence, immediately surrounding each cobalt atom, of a nucleus which was identical in very different crystals. Once the positions of the atoms in the nucleus and nucleotide were identified, the refinement of the electron density distributions in the different crystals proceeded in a fairly direct manner to establish the arrangement of all the remaining atoms in the molecules. The atomic arrangements found lead to the deduction of the chemical structure of a large part of the vitamin B$_{12}$ molecule and of the stereochemical organization of the whole. Of particular interest is the evident relation of the molecular nucleus found to porphyrins of type III and to porphobilinogen.
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nucleotidelike atomic sites electron density distributions xray analysis sizes stereochemical organization of chemical structure
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Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin Jennifer Kamper June Lindsey Maureen MacKay Jenny Pickworth J. H. Robertson Clara Brink Shoemaker J. G. White R. J. Prosen K. N. Trueblood,.The Structure of Vitamin B$_{12}$ I. An Outline of the Crystallographic Investigation of Vitamin B$_{12}$. 242 (1229),228-263.
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