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1.
Among the seven known isozymes of carbonic anhydrase in higher vertebrates, isozyme III is the least efficient in catalytic hydration of CO2 and the least susceptible to inhibition by sulfonamides. We have investigated the role of two basic residues near the active site of human carbonic anhydrase III (HCA III), lysine 64 and arginine 67, to determine whether they can account for some of the unique properties of this isozyme. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace these residues with histidine 64 and asparagine 67, the amino acids present at the corresponding positions of HCA II, the most efficient of the carbonic anhydrase isozymes. Catalysis by wild-type HCA III and mutants was determined from the initial velocity of hydration of CO2 at steady state by stopped-flow spectrophotometry and from the exchange of 18O between CO2 and water at chemical equilibrium by mass spectrometry. We have shown that histidine 64 functions as a proton shuttle in carbonic anhydrase by substituting histidine for lysine 64 in HCA III. The enhanced CO2 hydration activity and pH profile of the resulting mutant support this role for histidine 64 in the catalytic mechanism and suggest an approach that may be useful in investigating the mechanistic roles of active-site residues in other isozyme groups. Replacing arginine 67 in HCA III by asparagine enhanced catalysis of CO2 hydration 3-fold compared with that of wild-type HCA III, and the pH profile of the resulting mutant was consistent with a proton transfer role for lysine 64. Neither replacement enhanced the weak inhibition of HCA III by acetazolamide or the catalytic hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate.  相似文献   

2.
The human erythrocyte membrane is an efficient enhancer of both high (CA II) and low (CA I) activity isozymes of red blood cell carbonic anhydrase. The presence of membrane increased CO2 hydration catalyzed by bovine CA II 1.6-fold, human CA II 3.5-fold, and human CA I 1.6-fold. With the high activity CA isozymes, maximal stimulation was observed in the presence of 1-3 micrograms membrane protein/ml. The Vmax for bovine CA II (4 nM) rose from 0.302 to 0.839 mM/s, while that for human CA II (6 nM) increased from 0.113 to 0.414 mM/s in the absence and presence of membrane, respectively. The apparent Km for CO2 increased from 13.2 to 51.2 mM for bovine CA II, and from 6.5 to 38.5 mM for human CA II. Mixtures of membrane plus enzyme, upon centrifugation through linear sucrose density gradients, displayed enhanced Ca activity only in membrane-containing gradient fractions, verifying the stimulatory ability of membranes on enzyme activity and indicating tight and stable complex formation. Membrane enhancement of CA activity appears to be a general phenomenon in that mouse hepatocyte membranes also stimulated CA activity, although less efficiently than erythrocyte membranes. Of the many soluble putative effectors assayed, only imidazole enhanced CA II activity to an extent comparable with erythrocyte membranes; imidazole did not, however, stimulate the activity of human CA I. The data are consistent with a model of CA II activation by membrane association that may effect a distortion of the enzyme conformation in such a way as to facilitate intra- and/or intermolecular proton transfer between membrane-bound and enzyme-bound proton shuttling residues (perhaps the imidazole moiety of histidine) and the Zn-bound hydroxide at the catalytic site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
The carbonic anhydrases (CAs) in the α class are zinc-dependent metalloenzymes. Previous studies have reported that recombinant forms of carbonic anhydrase IX (CAIX), a membrane-bound form of CA expressed in solid tumors, appear to be activated by low levels of zinc independent of its well-studied role at the catalytic site. In this study, we sought to determine if CAIX is stimulated by zinc in its native environment. MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells express CAIX in response to hypoxia. We compared CAIX activity associated with membrane ghosts isolated from hypoxic cells with that in intact hypoxic cells. We measured CA activity directly using (18)O exchange from (13)CO(2) into water determined by membrane inlet mass spectrometry. In membrane ghosts, there was little effect of zinc at low concentrations on CAIX activity, although at high concentration zinc was inhibitory. In intact cells, zinc had no significant effect on CAIX activity. This suggests that there is an appreciable decrease in sensitivity to zinc when CAIX is in its natural membrane milieu compared to the purified forms.  相似文献   

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7.
Purified carbonic anhydrase isozymes I, II, and III (CA I, CA II, CA III) from various sources were treated with 2,3-butanedione and their bicarbonate dehydration reactions followed. The specific activities of human and bovine CA I and CA II and chicken CA III were not affected by the butanedione treatment, whereas the activities of human, gorilla, and bovine CA III were rapidly activated. These findings suggest that one, or both, of the two arginyl residues which appear to be unique to the active sites of the mammalian CA III isozymes are modified by butanedione.  相似文献   

8.
We have found that many dianionic species, at millimolar concentrations, significantly activate or inhibit the bovine carbonic anhydrase III-catalyzed hydration of CO2. Dianionic species such as HPO2-4 and SO2-3, with pKb values near 7, are activators, whereas weakly basis species such as SO2-4 act as inhibitors. Both activation and inhibition are partial hyperbolic in nature and do not appear to compete with monoanionic linear inhibitors like N-3. Our kinetic data are consistent with a formal mechanism of action for carbonic anhydrase III that is directly analogous to that of carbonic anhydrase II, in which Lys-64 of carbonic anhydrase III can act as an intramolecular H+ transfer group during CO2 hydration. Our data suggest that dianionic inhibitors depress the rate of H+ transfer during turnover by stabilizing the protonated form of Lys-64. We postulate that dianionic activators enhance the rate of a rate-limiting H+ transfer step in the mechanism, probably by acting directly as H+ acceptors.  相似文献   

9.
Histochemical demonstration of carbonic anhydrase activity   总被引:14,自引:4,他引:10  
Summary Freeze-dried frozen sections are floated on the surface of the freshly prepared incubation mixture (CoSO4 1.75 × 10–3 M, H2SO4 5.3 × 10–2 M, NaHCO3 1.57 × 10–2 M and KH2PO4 1.17 to 11.7 × 10–3 M; demonstration of weak activity requires high phosphate). A compound containing cobalt and phosphorous precipitates at carbonic anhydrase sites and is converted to CoS. Adequate staining requires only 2–10 minutes of incubation. Actazolamide inhibits the staining reaction in specific concentrations. Actazolamidein vivo, 20 mg/kgi.v. to mice 30 minutes before sacrifice also inhibited the staining. The proportion phosphorous in the specific precipitate increases with KH2PO4 of the medium (shown by the addition of60Co and32P). An explanation of the reaction mechanism is given, based on the catalyzed loss of CO2 in the surface layer. The inclusion of phosphate in the medium makes this modification ofHäusler's method so sensitive that it shows carbonic anhydrase activity in for instance stratum spinosum of the skin.This investigation was supported by grants from the Medical Faculty, University of Uppsala and from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (Grant NB 3060 to E.Bárány).  相似文献   

10.
11.
The possible sulfatase activity of several carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) isoforms have been investigated with a series of synthesized methanesulfonate derivatives of phenols. Four α-CA isozymes, i.e. hCA I, hCA II, hCA IV and hCA VI (h?=?human isoform), were included in the study. We evidenced that the original sulfonate esters are being hydrolyzed effectively to the corresponding phenols which there after act as CA inhibitors. The KI-s of these compounds ranged from 10.24 to 4012 µM against hCA I, 0.10 to 35.42 µM against hCA II, 0.49 to 45.06 µM against hCA IV and 3.27 to 608 µM against CA VI, respectively. The relevant sulfatase activity of CA with these esters is amazing considering the fact that 4-nitrophenyl-sulfate, an activated ester, is not a substrate of these enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Using radioimmunoassay, the concentration of carbonic anhydrase III in the livers of adult male rats was found to be approx. 30-times greater than that observed in mature females. Castration of male rats led to a marked reduction in liver carbonic anhydrase III concentrations which could be partially restored to control levels by testosterone replacement. Administration of testosterone to ovariectomised female rats induced about a 5-fold increase in liver carbonic anhydrase III concentration. Immunoprecipitation analysis of the products of liver mRNA translation in vitro with antiserum specific for carbonic anhydrase III showed that hormonal control of the levels of carbonic anhydrase III in liver is mediated by changes in the amount of translatable carbonic anhydrase III mRNA. Marked changes in liver carbonic anhydrase III concentrations were also observed in developing and ageing male rats.  相似文献   

13.
Androgen-linked control of rat liver carbonic anhydrase III   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The concentration of carbonic anhydrase III (CAIII) in male rat liver was found to be 30 times greater than that in the female. Castration of male rats led to marked reduction in liver CAIII concentrations which could be partially restored to control levels by testosterone replacement. Marked developmental and senescence changes in liver CAIII were also observed in male rats.  相似文献   

14.
Human carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) is an integral membrane protein and a member of the alpha class of carbonic anhydrases that includes the human and animal enzymes. We have prepared a truncated, recombinant form of human CA IX of 255 residues consistent with full-length human CA II, among the most efficient of the carbonic anhydrases. Catalysis by and inhibition of this form of human CA IX has been investigated using stopped-flow spectrophotometry and 18O exchange measured by mass spectrometry. In kinetic constants for the hydration of CO2, CA IX closely resembled CA II with maximal proton transfer-dependent 18O exchange near 1 micros(-1) and kcat/Km near 55 microM(-1) x s(-1). Human CA IX was very strongly inhibited by three classic sulfonamides and cyanate, with inhibition constants that are close to those for CA II.  相似文献   

15.
Sexual differentiation of rat liver carbonic anhydrase III   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Using radioimmunoassay, the concentration of carbonic anhydrase III in the livers of adult male rats was found to be approx. 30-times greater than that observed in mature females. Castration of male rats led to a marked reduction in liver carbonic anhydrase III concentrations which could be partially restored to control levels by testosterone replacement. Administration of testosterone to ovariectomised female rats induced about a 5-fold increase in liver carbonic anhydrase III concentration. Immunoprecipitation analysis of the products of liver mRNA translation in vitro with antiserum specific for carbonic anhydrase III showed that hormonal control of the levels of carbonic anhydrase III in liver is mediated by changes in the amount of translatable carbonic anhydrase III mRNA. Marked changes in liver carbonic anhydrase III concentrations were also observed in developing and ageing male rats.  相似文献   

16.
Intact erythrocytes from subjects with deficiency of blood carbonic anhydrase (CA) II and from normal subjects were assayed for enzyme activity by use of an 18O exchange technique in a solution containing 25 mM (CO2 + NaHCO3) plus 125 mM NaCl. At 25 degrees C and pH 7.4, the catalyzed reaction velocity was 0.32 +/- 0.04 M/s for the CA II-deficient and 1.60 +/- 0.12 M/s for the normal cells, a ratio of 1:5. Under the same conditions at 37 degrees C the relative difference between the CA II-deficient and normal cells was much less: the velocity for the CA II-deficient cells was 0.84 +/- 0.07 M/s and for the normal cells 1.60 +/- 0.32 M/s, a ratio of 1:1.9. Results were comparable for the hemolysates with the NaHCO3 reduced to 85 mM (the corresponding intracellular concentration): at 25 degrees C CA II-deficient cells had a velocity of 0.36 +/- 0.01 M/s compared with 1.12 +/- 0.04 M/s for the normal cells, a ratio of 1:3.1. At 37 degrees C again the relative difference between hemolysates from CA II normal and deficient cells was much less: the CA II-deficient cells had a reaction velocity of 1.17 +/- 0.22 M/s vs. 2.60 +/- 0.36 M/s for the normal cells, a ratio of 1:2.2. The greater fractional reduction of enzyme velocity of CA II-deficient cells at 25 degrees C compared with 37 degrees C appears to be explained by a greater chloride inhibition of the presumed CA I at the lower temperature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
18.
Four amino acid residues, His64, Asn67, Leu198 and Val207, in the active site of human carbonic anhydrase II, have been replaced by Lys64, Arg67, Phe198 and Ile207, which are characteristic for the muscle-specific, low-activity isoenzyme form, carbonic anhydrase III. The aim of the investigation has been to test if any of these residues, or a combination of them, is important for the low CO2 hydration activity, low esterase activity, low pKa for the pH/rate profile and low affinity for sulfonamide inhibitors characterizing carbonic anhydrases III. However, no evidence for such critical roles was found. A combination of Lys64 and Arg67 appears to result in a decrease in CO2 hydration activity, but even the quadruple mutant having all four changes is only eight times less active (kcat/Km) than unmodified isoenzyme II, in contrast to isoenzyme III which is nearly 300 times less active than isoenzyme II. The 4-nitrophenyl acetate hydrolase activity of the quadruple mutant is sevenfold lower than that of unmodified isoenzyme II, while the active site of isoenzyme III hardly catalyzes the hydrolysis of this ester at all. The pKa controlling the esterase activity of the quadruple mutant is 6.2, which should be compared to a value of 6.8 for unmodified isoenzyme II, and about 5 for isoenzyme III. While isoenzyme III binds sulfonamide inhibitors 10(3)-10(4) times less strongly than isoenzyme II, only [Asn-67----Arg]isoenzyme II shows a weaker binding of the investigated sulfonamide, dansylamide, but only by a factor of two. Some of the other mutants show enhanced affinities, up to nearly fourfold for the double mutant with Phe198 and Ile207. It is speculated that additional differences between the active sites of isoenzyme II and III might be important for the precise orientations and interactions of the side chains of isoenzyme-III-specific amino acid residues.  相似文献   

19.
A new model for catalysis of human carbonic anhydrase II is suggested. The model is based on the X-ray structure of the hydrogen bond network in the catalytic site. The outer part of the network is proposed to adjust the p K(a) of the catalytic site to the experimentally observed value of about 7. The inner part of the network is proposed to become a low-barrier hydrogen bond network in the transition state. The energy released in forming the low-barrier hydrogen bond network is used to catalyse the interconversion of CO(2) and HCO(3)(-). The suggested molecular mechanism is consistent with the generally accepted kinetic scheme for human carbonic anhydrase II.  相似文献   

20.
The maximal turnover rate of CO2 hydration catalyzed by the carbonic anhydrases is limited by proton transfer steps from the zinc-bound water to solution, steps that regenerate the catalytically active zinc-bound hydroxide. Catalysis of CO2 hydration by wild-type human carbonic anhydrase III (HCA III) (k(cat) = 2 ms (-1)) is the least efficient among the carbonic anhydrases in its class, in part because it lacks an efficient proton shuttle residue. We have used site-directed mutagenesis to test positions within the active-site cavity of HCA III for their ability to carry out proton transfer by replacing various residues with histidine. Catalysis by wild-type HCA III and these six variants was determined from the initial velocity of hydration of CO2 measured by stopped-flow spectrophotometry and from the exchange of 18O between CO2 and H2O at chemical equilibrium by mass spectrometry. The results show that histidine at three positions (Lys64His, Arg67His and Phe131His) have the capacity to transfer protons during catalysis, enhancing maximal velocity of CO2 hydration and 18O exchange from 4- to 15-fold compared with wild-type HCA III. Histidine residues at the other three positions (Trp5His, Tyr7His, Phe20His) showed no firm evidence for proton transfer. These results are discussed in terms of the stereochemistry of the active-site cavity and possible proton transfer pathways.  相似文献   

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