Corrinoids are a group of compounds based on the skeleton of corrin, a cyclic system containing four pyrrole rings similar to porphyrins.[2] These include compounds based on octadehydrocorrin, which has the trivial name corrole.[3]
Compounds containing the "Cob-" prefix (notcorrin) are cobalt derivatives, and may include an oxidation state, as in "Cob(II)alamin". When cobalt is replaced by another metal or hydrogen, the name changes accordingly, as in ferrobamic acid or hydrogenobamic acid.
Reactions with cyanide
A solution of aquacyano-corrinoids, such as cobalamin or cobinamide, reacts with free cyanide in an aqueous sample. The binding of cyanide to the corrinoid cobalt center leads to a color change from orange to violet.[4] Quantification of the cyanide content is feasible by UV-vis spectroscopy.[5][6] Absorption of the corrinoid on a solid phase,[7] allows detection of cyanide even in colored samples, rendering this method appropriate for the analysis of cyanide in water, wastewater, blood, and food.[8][9] Furthermore, this technology is non-toxic and considerably less prone to interference than the pyridine-barbituric acid colorimetry method.
^Pratt, J.M. (1972). Inorganic Chemistry of Vitamin B12. Academic Press. p. 44.
^Zelder, F.H. (2008). "Specific Colorimetric Detection of Cyanide Triggered by a Conformational Switch in Vitamin B12". Inorganic Chemistry. 47 (4): 1264–1266. doi:10.1021/ic702368b. PMID18205304.
^Mannel-Croise, Zelder (2009). "Side chains of cobalt corrinoids control the sensitivity and selectivity in the colorimetric detection of cyanide". Inorganic Chemistry. 48 (4): 1272–1274. doi:10.1021/ic900053h. PMID19161297.