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1.
Among the isozymes of carbonic anhydrase, isozyme III is the least efficient in the catalysis of the hydration of CO2 and was previously thought to be unaffected by proton transfer from buffers to the active site. We report that buffers of small size, especially imidazole, increase the rate of catalysis by human carbonic anhydrase III (HCA III) of (1) 18O exchange between HCO3- and water measured by membrane-inlet mass spectrometry and (2) the dehydration of HCO3- measured by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Imidazole enhanced the rate of release of 18O-labeled water from the active site of wild-type carbonic anhydrase III and caused a much greater enhancement, up to 20-fold, for the K64H, R67H, and R67N mutants of this isozyme. Imidazole had no effect on the rate of interconversion of CO2 and HCO3- at chemical equilibrium. Steady-state measurements showed that the addition of imidazole resulted in increases in the turnover number (kcat) for the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by HCA III and for the dehydration of HCO3- catalyzed by R67N HCA III. These results are consistent with the transfer of a proton from the imidazolium cation to the zinc-bound hydroxide at the active site, a step required to regenerate the active form of enzyme in the catalytic cycle. Like isozyme II of carbonic anhydrase, isozyme III can be enhanced in catalytic rate by the presence of small molecule buffers in solution.  相似文献   

2.
To test the hypothesis that histidine 64 in the active site of human carbonic anhydrase II functions as a proton-transfer group in the catalysis of CO2 hydration, we have studied a site-specific mutant having histidine 64 replaced by alanine, which cannot transfer protons. The steady-state kinetics of CO2 hydration has been measured as well as the exchange of 18O between CO2 and water at chemical equilibrium. The results show that the rate of exchange between CO2 and HCO3- at chemical equilibrium is essentially unaffected by the amino acid substitution at pH greater than 7.0 and slightly decreased in the mutant at pH less than 7.0 (by a factor of 2 at pH 6.0). However, in the absence of buffer the rate of release from the active site of water bearing substrate oxygen is smaller by as much as 20-fold for the mutant as compared to unmodified enzyme. Furthermore, in the unmodified enzyme water release is inhibited by micromolar concentrations of Cu2+ ions, but no such inhibition is observed with the alanine 64 variant. These results suggest that the mutation has specifically affected the rate of proton transfer between the active site and the reaction medium. This kinetic defect in the mutant can be overcome by increasing the concentration of certain buffers, such as imidazole and 1-methylimidazole, but not by others buffers, such as MOPS or HEPES. Similarly, the maximal rate of CO2 hydration at steady state catalyzed by the alanine 64 variant is very low in the presence of MOPS or TAPS buffers but considerably higher in the presence of imidazole derivatives.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
We report three experiments which show that the hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase III from bovine skeletal muscle occurs at a site on the enzyme different than the active site for CO2 hydration. This is in contrast with isozymes I and II of carbonic anhydrase for which the sites of 4-nitrophenyl acetate hydrolysis and CO2 hydration are the same. The pH profile of kcat/Km for hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate was roughly described by the ionization of a group with pKa 6.5, whereas kcat/Km for CO2 hydration catalyzed by isozyme III was independent of pH in the range of pH 6.0-8.5. The apoenzyme of carbonic anhydrase III, which is inactive in the catalytic hydration of CO2, was found to be as active in the hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate as native isozyme III. Concentrations of N-3 and OCN- and the sulfonamides methazolamide and chlorzolamide which inhibited CO2 hydration did not affect catalytic hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate by carbonic anhydrase III.  相似文献   

4.
The active sites of carbonic anhydrases I contain a unique histidine residue at sequence position 200. To test the hypothesis that His200 is essential for the isoenzyme-specific catalytic and inhibitor-binding properties of carbonic anhydrases I, a variant of human carbonic anhydrase II, having His200 for Thr200, was prepared by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. The variant has a circular dichroic spectrum that is indistinguishable from that of the parent enzyme. The kinetics of CO2 hydration and HCO3- dehydration has been investigated. The results show that the amino acid substitution has led to changes of catalytic parameters as well as Ki values for anion inhibition in the expected directions towards the values for isoenzyme I. However, the maximal 4-nitrophenyl acetate hydrolase activity of the variant is higher than for any naturally occurring carbonic anhydrase studied so far. A detailed analysis of the kinetic observations suggests that the modification has resulted in a change of the step that limits the maximal rate of CO2 hydration at saturating buffer concentrations. This rate-limiting step is an intramolecular proton transfer in unmodified isoenzyme II and, presumably, HCO3- dissociation in the variant and in human isoenzyme I. A free-energy profile for the dominating pathway of CO2 hydration at high pH was constructed. The results suggest that the major effect of His200 is a stabilization of the enzyme-HCO3- complex by about 7.5 kJ/mol (variant) and 6.1 kJ/mol (human isoenzyme I) relative to unmodified isoenzyme II, while proton transfer between the metal site and the reaction medium is only marginally affected by the amino acid replacement.  相似文献   

5.
We have determined the activation parameters of kcat and kcat/Km for the carbonic anhydrase II-catalyzed hydration of CO2. The enthalpy and entropy of activation for kcat is 7860 +/- 120 cal mol-1 and -3.99 +/- 0.42 cal mol-1 K-1, respectively, for the human enzyme. Results for the bovine enzyme were statistically indistinguishable from those of the human enzyme. The entropy of activation of kcat for the human enzyme was further decomposed into partially compensating electrostatic(es) (delta S*es = +15.1 cal mol-1 K-1) and nonelectrostatic(nes) (delta S*nes = -19.1 cal mol-1 K-1) terms. Computer simulations of a formal kinetic mechanism for carbonic anhydrase II-catalyzed CO2 hydration show that 82% of the temperature effect on kcat can be attributed to the temperature effect on the intramolecular proton transfer step. The reported activation parameters are consistent with a substantial enzyme or active site solvent conformational change in the transition state of the intramolecular proton transfer step, and is consistent with the mechanism of proton transfer proposed by Venkatasubban and Silverman (Venkatasubban, K. S., and Silverman, D. N. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 4984-4989).  相似文献   

6.
P Paneth  M H O'Leary 《Biochemistry》1987,26(6):1728-1731
The carbon kinetic isotope effect on the enzymatic dehydration of HCO3- ion is k12/k13 = 1.011 and is independent, within experimental error, of the addition of sucrose, substitution of D2O for H2O, and substitution of enzyme-bound Zn2+ by Co2+. These results are consistent with a ping-pong mechanism in which proton transfer between enzyme and solvent is separated from HCO3- dehydration. For the dehydration half-reaction, diffusional processes are severalfold faster than dehydration, and the rate-determining step is the dehydration itself. The intrinsic isotope effect is approximately 1.011, indicating that hydration of CO2 occurs by reaction of zinc-bound OH-, rather than zinc-bound H2O.  相似文献   

7.
Steady-state kinetic studies of the bovine carbonic anhydrase B-catalyzed hydration of CO2, dehydration of HCO3-, and hydrolysis of p-nitrophenylacetate were made in glycerol/water solvents of increased viscosity in order that the effect of diffusion-control on the substrate association reactions could be determined. The minimum association rate constants (kmin = V/(Km[E0])) were obtained at low substrate concentrations. The esterase activity did not depend upon the solvent viscosity. However, both the CO2 hydration and HCO3- dehydration reactions depended upon the solvent viscosity consistent with partial diffusion control. Thus both chemical activation and diffusion control processes contribute to the observed kmin. In low-viscosity aqueous solutions both hydration and dehydration are largely controlled by chemical activation. However, at higher viscosities, equal to that found in the interior of the erythrocyte, both reactions are largely diffusion controlled. This result can be interpreted to mean that carbonic anhydrase is a highly evolved enzyme that has approached its maximum efficiency. The extent of diffusion control observed rules out H2CO3 as a significant reactant with the enzyme. Several models that yield minimum steric requirements for access of substrate to the active site are examined. Minimum steric constraints are less for the smaller CO2. The slower esterase reaction is not influenced by diffusion.  相似文献   

8.
The CO2 hydration activities of cloned human carbonic anhydrase II (carbonate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.1) and variants with Lys, Glu, Gln or Ala replacing His at sequence position 64 have been measured in a variety of different buffers in the pH range 6-9. The variants with Lys-64, Gln-64 and Ala-64 showed non-Michaelis-Menten behavior under some conditions, apparent substrate inhibition being prominent near pH 9. However, asymptotic Michaelis-Menten parameters could be estimated for the limit of low substrate concentrations. All variants show distinct buffer specificities, and imidazole derivatives, Ches and phosphate buffers yield higher kcat values that Bicine, Taps and Mops buffers under otherwise similar conditions. These results are interpreted in terms of different pathways for a rate-limiting proton transfer. In unmodified enzyme, the very high catalytic activity depends on His-64 functioning as an efficient proton transfer group, but this pathway is not available in the variants with Gln-64 and Ala-64. Imidazoles, Ches and phosphate are thought to participate in a metal center-to-buffer proton transfer pathway, whereas Bicine, Taps, Mops and Mes appear to lack this capacity, so that the rate-limiting proton transfer occurs in a metal center-to-bulk water pathway for these variants. The Lys-64 and Glu-64 variants give significantly higher kcat values in Taps, Mops and Mes buffers than the Ala-64 and Gln-64 variants. The pH dependencies of these kcat values are compatible with the hypothesis that Lys-64 and Glu-64 can function as proton transfer groups. Thus, at pH near 9, Lys-64 appears to be only 5-times less efficient than His-64, while Glu-64 is inefficient. At pH 6, Lys-64 is an inefficient proton transfer group, but Glu-64 is only 2-3-times less efficient than His-64. The data indicate that Lys-64 and Glu-64 have pKa values near 8 and below 6, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
T J Williams  R W Henkens 《Biochemistry》1985,24(10):2459-2462
Using 13C NMR spectroscopy, we have further investigated the binding of HCO3- in the active site of an artificial form of human carbonic anhydrase I in which the native zinc is replaced by Co(II). The Co(II) enzyme, unlike all other metal-substituted derivatives, has functional properties closely similar to those of the native zinc enzyme. By measuring the spin-lattice relaxation rate and the line width for both the CO2 and HCO3- at two field strengths, we have determined both the paramagnetic effects that reflect substrate binding and the exchange effects due to catalysis at chemical equilibrium. The following are the results at 14 degrees C and pH 6.3 (1) HCO3- is bound in the active site of the catalytically competent enzyme with the 13C of the HCO3- located 3.22 +/- 0.02 A from the Co(II); (2) the apparent equilibrium dissociation constant for the bound HCO3- is 7.6 +/- 1.5 mM, determined by using the paramagnetic effects on the line widths, and 10 +/- 2 mM, determined by using the exchange effects; (3) the lifetime of HCO3- bound to the metal is (4.4 +/- 0.4) X 10(-5) s; (4) the overall catalyzed CO2 in equilibrium HCO3- exchange rate constant of the Co(II) enzyme is (9.6 +/- 0.4) X 10(3) s-1; (5) the electron spin relaxation time of the Co(II), determined by using paramagnetic effects on the bound HCO3-, is (1.1 +/- 0.1) X 10(-11) s. The data did not provide any direct information on the binding of CO2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The alpha-carbonic anhydrase gene from Helicobacter pylori strain 26695 has been cloned and sequenced. The full-length protein appears to be toxic to Escherichia coli, so we prepared a modified form of the gene lacking a part that presumably encodes a cleavable signal peptide. This truncated gene could be expressed in E. coli yielding an active enzyme comprising 229 amino acid residues. The amino acid sequence shows 36% identity with that of the enzyme from Neisseria gonorrhoeae and 28% with that of human carbonic anhydrase II. The H. pylori enzyme was purified by sulfonamide affinity chromatography and its circular dichroism spectrum and denaturation profile in guanidine hydrochloride have been measured. Kinetic parameters for CO2 hydration catalyzed by the H. pylori enzyme at pH 8.9 and 25 degrees C are kcat=2.4x10(5) s(-1), KM=17 mM and kcat/KM=1.4x10(7) M(-1) x s(-1). The pH dependence of kcat/KM fits with a simple titration curve with pK(a)=7.5. Thiocyanate yields an uncompetitive inhibition pattern at pH 9 indicating that the maximal rate of CO2 hydration is limited by proton transfer between a zinc-bound water molecule and the reaction medium in analogy to other forms of the enzyme. The 4-nitrophenyl acetate hydrolase activity of the H. pylori enzyme is quite low with an apparent catalytic second-order rate constant, k(enz), of 24 M(-1) x s(-1) at pH 8.8 and 25 degrees C. However, with 2-nitrophenyl acetate as substrate a k(enz) value of 665 M(-1) x s(-1) was obtained under similar conditions.  相似文献   

11.
The application of carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to the study of the kinetics of millisecond timescale reactions of CO2 in human erythrocyte suspensions is described. The rates of intracellular enzyme catalyzed CO2 hydration and HCO3- dehydration were quantitatively determined, as well as the rates of CO2 diffusion into and out of the erythrocytes. The method also provides an accurate measure of the intracellular pH in the range of pH 6.0 to pH 7.0. A temperature dependence study was used to determine the thermodynamic functions for the intracellular hydration-dehydration reaction.  相似文献   

12.
In this study, bovine articular and human chondrocytes from the C-20/A4 cell line were tested for the functional activity and molecular presence of the enzyme carbonic anhydrase. This enzyme is classically considered to be important in the maintenance of high cellular buffering capacity by catalysing the slow attainment of equilibrium between CO(2) and HCO(3)(-). The first functional assay measured the rate of pH equilibration after administration of a fixed dose of CO(2) solution to cell lysates. Compared to positive controls (human erythrocytes, murine M1 cells and purified carbonic anhydrase), chondrocyte lysates attained equilibrium at a significantly slower rate, similar to the rate obtained with a negative control (Xenopus oocytes). A second functional assay studied CO(2) hydration kinetics in intact C-20/A4 cells, using a pH-sensitive fluorescent dye, as the CO(2) content of the extracellular solution was changed. It was shown that C-20/A4 cells accelerate hydration only to a small degree. Hydration kinetics were reduced to the spontaneous rate in the presence of acetazolamide. Western immunoblotting with isoform-nonspecific antibodies to carbonic anhydrase demonstrated weak staining in both bovine and human chondrocytes.  相似文献   

13.
P Paneth  M H O'Leary 《Biochemistry》1985,24(19):5143-5147
The carbon-13 kinetic isotope effect on the dehydration of HCO3- by bovine carbonic anhydrase has been measured. To accomplish this, bicarbonate was added to a buffer solution at pH 8 containing carbonic anhydrase under conditions where purging of the product CO2 from the solution is rapid. Measurement of the isotopic composition of the purged CO2 as a function of the concentration of carbonic anhydrase permits calculation of the isotope effect on the enzymic reaction. The isotope effect on the dehydration is k12/k13 = 1.0101 +/- 0.0004. This effect is most consistent with a ping-pong mechanism for carbonic anhydrase action, in which proton transfer to or from the enzyme occurs in a step separate from the dehydration step. Substrate and product dissociation steps are at least 2-3-fold faster than the hydration/dehydration step.  相似文献   

14.
The steady-state kinetics of CO2 hydration catalyzed by human carbonic anhydrase I (carbonate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.1) has been investigated at three pH values corresponding to different parts of the pH-rate profile. Two buffer systems with similar pKa values were used at each pH. The results show that the catalyzed rates depend on the buffer concentration but also on the chemical nature of the buffer. For example, at pH 8.8 the buffer 1,2-dimethylimidazole behaves formally as a second substrate in a 'ping-pong' mechanism yielding a maximal kcat value of 2.2 x 10(5) s-1, whereas much lower rates were obtained with Taps buffers. Similarly, at pH 7.3 1-methylimidazole yields higher rates than Mops and at pH 6.3 3,5-lutidine is more efficient than Mes. Non-Michaelis-Menten kinetics were observed with all buffers except 1,2-dimethylimidazole. In addition, while the apparent buffer activation by 1,2-dimethylimidazole can be described by a single Km value of 26 mM, the Mes concentration dependence is consistent with the presence of two components of similar magnitudes with Km values of 45 mM and 0.15 mM. These results are interpreted within the framework of the 'zinc-hydroxide' mechanism in terms of multiple pathways for the rate-contributing transfer of a proton from the zinc-bound water molecule, formed during CO2/HCO3- interconversion, to the reaction medium, thus, regenerating zinc-bound OH-.  相似文献   

15.
We have measured the pH dependence of the kinetics of CO2 hydration catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase III from the skeletal muscle of the cat. Two methods were used: an initial velocity study in which the change in absorbance of a pH indicator was measured in a stopped flow spectrophotometer, and an equilibrium study in which the rate of exchange of 18O between CO2 and H2O was measured with a mass spectrometer. We have found that the steady state constants kCO2 cat and KCO2 m are independent of pH within experimental error in the range of pH 5.0 to 8.5; the rate of release from the enzyme of the oxygen abstracted from substrate HCO-3 in the dehydration is also independent of pH in this range. This behavior is very different from that observed for carbonic anhydrase II for which kCO2 cat and the rate of release of substrate oxygen are very pH-dependent. The rate of interconversion of CO2 and HCO-3 at equilibrium catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase III is not altered when the solvent is changed from H2O to 98% D2O and 2% H2O. Thus, the interconversion probably proceeds without proton transfer in its rate-limiting steps, similar to isozymes I and II.  相似文献   

16.
The hydration of CO2 catalyzed by human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) is accompanied by proton transfer from the zinc-bound water of the enzyme to solution. We have replaced the proton shuttling residue His 64 with Ala and placed cysteine residues within the active-site cavity by mutating sites Trp 5, Asn 62, Ile 91, and Phe 131. These mutants were modified at the single inserted cysteine with imidazole analogs to introduce new potential shuttle groups. Catalysis by these modified mutants was determined by stopped-flow and 18O-exchange methods. Specificity in proton transfer was demonstrated; only modifications of the Cys 131-containing mutant showed enhancement in the proton transfer step of catalysis compared with unmodified Cys 131-containing mutant. Modifications at other sites resulted in up to 3-fold enhancement in rates of CO2 hydration, with apparent second-order rate constants near 350 microM(-1) s(-1). These are among the largest values of kcat/Km observed for a carbonic anhydrase.  相似文献   

17.
At pH 7.4, CO2, rather than HCO3-, markedly enhances the oxidation of diverse substrates by SOD1 plus H2O2. Since the concentration of CO2 would fall with rising pH in HCO3- buffers, it was of interest to explore the effects of pH on the peroxidase activity of SOD1 in the presence and in the absence of HCO3-. The rate of NADPH peroxidation in the HCO3- buffer was minimally affected by pH in the range of 8-10.5; in a pyrophosphate buffer, the rate increased markedly, such that at pH 10.5 the rates in the two buffers were nearly identical. Similar results were obtained when urate was used as the peroxidizeable substrate. These results are explicable on the basis of an increase in the rate with pH due to the ionization of H2O2 to the effective HO2- coupled with a decrease in [CO2] due to the ionizations of H2CO3, which displaces the hydration equilibrium to the right. These two opposing effects counteract in the HCO3(-)-buffered reaction mixtures; in the pyrophosphate buffer, only the effect of increasing [H02-] was seen.  相似文献   

18.
Y Pocker  N Janji? 《Biochemistry》1988,27(11):4114-4120
In our earlier paper we showed that the rates of CO2 hydration and HCO3- dehydration catalyzed by the high-activity form of mammalian erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase (CA II) were dependent on solution viscosity increase and that the effect was linked to some kind of proton-transfer-related event [Pocker, Y., & Janji?, N. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 2597-2606]. In order to further elucidate the source of the observed viscosity effect, the dependence of kcat and Km for CA II catalyzed HCO3- dehydration at pH 5.90 on sucrose-induced viscosity increase was investigated at several concentrations of 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid (MES) buffer, including the very low buffer concentration region (less than 10 mM) where the proton transfer between the shuttle group on the enzyme and buffer becomes rate limiting. In all examined cases, kcat steadily decreased with added sucrose while Km remained independent of the viscosity increase. The extent to which this reaction was dependent on viscosity was found to be constant, within experimental error, over the entire range of MES buffer concentrations studied (1-20 mM). Furthermore, the viscosity effect was qualitatively and quantitatively the same when an exceptionally large buffer (i.e., bovine serum albumin) was used instead of the more commonly used biological buffer (i.e., MES).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Catalase conjugates with 3, 7, 9 and 42 progesterone molecules were obtained by the reaction between the enzyme and N-oxy-succinimide ether of 3-0-carboxymethyloxime of progesterone. The enzyme modified by 42 progesterone molecules is effective in o-dianisidine oxidation by hydrogen peroxide and has a kcat/KM value of 512 M-1 s-1. The catalase conjugates with 3, 7 and 9 progesterone molecules exhibit a high activity during o-dianisidine oxidation by cumene hydroperoxide. The activity of conjugates is higher than that of the native non-modified enzyme in the same reaction. The maximum effectiveness was observed for catalase modified by 7 progesterone molecules. This conjugate is characterized by kcat/KM of 99,000 M-1 s-1 at 30 degrees C. The effect of the degree of enzyme modification on the kinetic parameters of o-dianisidine oxidation by H2O2 and cumene hydroperoxide is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
We have measured the pH dependence of kcat and kcat/Km for CO2 hydration catalyzed by both native Zn2+-and metallo-substituted Co2+-bovine carbonic anhydrase II in the absence of inhibitory ions. For the Zn2+-enzyme, the pKa values controlling kcat and kcat/Km profiles are similar, but for the Co2+-enzyme the values are about 0.6 pH units apart. Computer simulations of a metal-hydroxide mechanism of carbonic anhydrase suggest that the data for both native and Co2+-carbonic anhydrase can be accounted for by the same mechanism of action, if we postulate that the substitution of Co2+ for Zn2+ in the active site causes a separation of about 0.6 pH units in the pKa values of His-64 and the metal-bound water molecule. We have also measured the activation parameters for kcat and kcat/Km for Co2+-substituted carbonic anhydrase II-catalyzed CO2 hydration and have compared these values to those obtained previously for the native Zn2+-enzyme. For kcat and kcat/Km we obtain an enthalpy of activation of 4.4 +/- 0.6 and approximately 0 kcal mol-1, respectively. The corresponding entropies of activation are -18 +/- 2 and -27 +/- 2 cal mol-1 K-1.  相似文献   

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