To facilitate production of functional enzymes and to study their mechanisms, especially in the complex cases of coenzyme‐dependent systems, activation of an inactive apoenzyme preparation with a catalytically competent coenzyme intermediate is an attractive strategy. This is illustrated with the simple chemical synthesis of a flavin‐methylene iminium compound previously proposed as a key intermediate in the catalytic cycle of several important flavoenzymes involved in nucleic acid metabolism. Reconstitution of both flavin‐dependent RNA methyltransferase and thymidylate synthase apoproteins with this synthetic compound led to active enzymes for the C5‐uracil methylation within their respective transfer RNA and dUMP substrate. This strategy is expected to be of general application in enzymology.