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1.
Pig muscle carbonic anhydrase III (carbonate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.1) has been isolated and purified to homogeneity with chromatographic techniques. It has been found to be a 30 kDa protein displaying the same three activities (CO2 hydratase, acetate esterase, p-nitrophenyl phosphatase) previously described for the rabbit muscle isoenzyme, including the phosphatase activity not seen in the erythrocyte isoenzymes. The turnover numbers of the three activities are of the same order of magnitude as previously reported for rabbit muscle carbonic anhydrase III. Km and Vmax for the pig muscle CO2 hydratase activity were found to be 83 mM and 6000 s-1, respectively. The extinction coefficient at 280 nm (1 cm light path) is 22.2 for a 1% solution. Five half-cystine residues determined by performic acid oxidation are free for reaction with p-mercuribenzoate but only four are accessible to titration with dithiobisnitrobenzene. The amino acid composition of the pig muscle isoenzyme III has a high level of homology compared with that of rabbit and bovine muscle carbonic anhydrases III.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The effects of different concentrations of acetazolamide, a specific carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, have been investigated in the quail kidney. The histochemical patterns, interpreted by means of quantitative analyses proved that 0.1 m acetazolamide inhibited the enzyme activity in all the reactive tubular segments except for distal tubules. At this site, the reaction product disappeared from the cytoplasm but strong positivity persisted at the apical surface. The luminal staining was still present at higher inhibitor concentrations up to 0.8 m acetazolamide. Under histophotometric analyses, the residual reactivity proved to be nearly the same at the increasing inhibitor concentrations assayed. The validity of the results was checked by similar investigations in other control tissues.On the basis of the properties known for carbonic anhydrase in mammalian kidney, we conclude that the luminal membrane staining in the quail distal tubules might be due to a carbonic anhydrase isoenzyme that is similar, both in affinity for acetazolamide and in intracellular localization, to the membrane-bound enzyme purified from mammalian proximal convoluted tubules.  相似文献   

3.
Purification and characterization of human salivary carbonic anhydrase   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
A novel carbonic anhydrase was purified from human saliva with inhibitor affinity chromatography followed by ion-exchange chromatography. The molecular weight was determined to be 42,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicating that the human salivary enzyme is larger than the cytosolic isoenzymes CA I, CA II, and CA III (Mr 29,000) from human tissue sources. Each molecule of the salivary enzyme had two N-linked oligosaccharide chains which were cleaved by endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase F but not by endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H, indicating that the oligosaccharides are complex type. The isoelectric point was determined to be 6.4, but significant charge heterogeneity was found in different preparations. The human salivary isozyme has lower specific activity than the rat salivary isozyme and the human red blood cell isozyme II in the CO2 hydratase reaction. The inhibitory properties of the salivary isozyme resemble those of CA II with iodide, sulfanilamide, and bromopyruvic acid, but the salivary enzyme is less sensitive to acetazolamide and methazolamide than CA II. Antiserum raised in a rabbit against the salivary enzyme cross-reacted with CA II from human erythrocytes, indicating that human salivary carbonic anhydrase and CA II must share at least one antigenic site. CA I and CA III did not crossreact with this antiserum. The amount of salivary carbonic anhydrase in the saliva of the CA II-deficient patients was greatly reduced, indicating that the CA II deficiency mutation directly or indirectly affects the expression of the salivary carbonic anhydrase isozyme. From these results we conclude that the salivary carbonic anhydrase is immunologically and genetically related to CA II, but that it is a novel and distinct isozyme which we tentatively designate CA VI.  相似文献   

4.
The CD spectra of human carbonic anhydrase I and II and bovine carbonic anhydrase III were recorded and analyzed. The 3D structures of these isoenzymes are known, showing very similar secondary structure and polypeptide-chain fold. The tryptophan content, however, differs between the isoenzymes, i.e., isoenzymes I, II, and III possess 6, 7, and 8 tryptophans, respectively. All of the tryptophans except the additional tryptophans in isoenzymes II and III, i.e., W245 and W47, are conserved. Despite the fact that X-ray structure determinations showed that the isoenzymes had highly similar secondary structure, the contents of alpha-helix and beta-sheet structure differed considerably when using different CD algorithms for estimation of the fractions of various secondary structural elements. This shows that aromatic amino acids also interfere in the wavelength region (far-UV) used to calculate the amount of secondary structure. Such interference is especially problematic when analyzing proteins like carbonic anhydrase, which consist mainly of beta-structure that gives rise to weak ellipticity bands, compared to the bands arising from alpha-helical structure.  相似文献   

5.
Madin Darby canine kidney (MDCK) renal epithelial cell cultures have been investigated with respect to their potency to express carbonic anhydrase activity using histochemical methods. Acetazolamide inhibitable carbonic anhydrase activity could be detected in the cytoplasmic compartment as well as in the apical membrane of cells when grown on solid culture supports. Cells forming domes in MDCK monolayers exhibit the highest histochemically detectable enzyme activity. The attempt to subculture clonal cell lines from MDCK monolayer cultures resulted in the establishment of 5 clones, slightly different with respect to size and shape of cells and their potency to form domes. Scanning electron microscopy ensured the identification of one clone (1A4), which distinctly differed from the others with respect to the apical membrane architecture. Co-localization of peanut agglutinin and carbonic anhydrase activity at the plasma membrane always revealed a combined occurrence of enzyme reactivity and lectin binding in the apical membrane domain. Both, lectin binding and carbonic anhydrase activity were distinctly more intense in plasma membrane regions equipped with microvilli. From the results it is concluded that MDCK cells in tissue culture retained properties of intercalated cells of the nephron collecting duct segment.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Carbonic anhydrase isoenzymes I and II have been localized in human bone and cartilage. Osteoclasts are strongly positive for carbonic anhydrase II but very little if any reaction is observed for carbonic anhydrase I. In tendon giant cell tumor osteoclastlike-giant cells contained high amounts of carbonic anhydrase II suggesting the close relation of these cells to normal osteoclasts. In growth plate cartilage strong staining was obtained in late proliferative and hypertrophic chondroxytes as well as in extracellular matrix of hypertrophic zone also only with anti-human carbonic anhydrase II.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Three different isoenzymes of human carbonic anhydrase are now well characterized. Carbonic anhydrase I and II have been known for several years and are located in high amounts in red blood cells as well as in many other tissues.Carbonic anhydrase III, a protein showing CO2 hydratase and p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity was isolated from skeletal muscle some years ago. Earlier observations based on enzyme activity and radioimmunoassay studies have suggested that this protein is present in greater quantities in red skeletal muscles than in white ones. We have purified CA III from human soleus muscle and using obtained monospecific polyclonal antibody localized this protein in the same muscle fibers which show acid resistant ATPase activity. Using this protein as a marker for type I muscle fibers, fiber classification into type I and II could now be done also from paraffin embedded sections.This study is supported by the Research Council of Physical Education and Sport, Ministry of Education, Finland  相似文献   

8.
Summary Carbonic anhydrase activity was studied in the quail metanephros by means of histochemical, histophotometrical and biochemical methods. Male and female samples were examined separately in order to show sex-related differences in enzyme activity and localization. The staining patterns revealed differential distribution of reaction product in the different, tubular segments. The initial portion of proximal tubules showed positivity on the brush border in female kidneys only.Extra situ investigations provided further evidence of sexual dimorphism resulting in higher values of enzyme activity for female than for male kidneys.In both sexes, marked staining was detected at the distal tubule level where histophotometric analysis confirmed the highest amount of reaction product. Moreover, the intracellular staining distribution at this site proved to be similar to that observed for mammalian proximal convoluted tubules.In the collecting ducts, a mosaic-like pattern was found with respect to both carbonic anhydrase staining and metachromatic properties.The functional significance of the presence of enzyme in the different renal tubules is discussed by comparison with the mammalian kidney. A model is proposed whereby the distal tubules represent the main sites of urinary acidification and bicarbonate reabsorption.  相似文献   

9.
The carbonic anhydrases reversibly hydrate carbon dioxide to yield bicarbonate and hydrogen ion. They have a variety of physiological functions, although the specific roles of each of the 10 known isozymes are unclear. Carbonic anhydrase isozyme III is particularly rich in skeletal muscle and adipocytes, and it is unique among the isozymes in also exhibiting phosphatase activity. Previously published studies provided evidence that the phosphatase activity was intrinsic to carbonic anhydrase III, that it had specificity for tyrosine phosphate, and that activity was regulated by reversible glutathionylation of cysteine186. To study the mechanism of this phosphatase, we cloned and expressed the rat liver carbonic anhydrase III. The purified recombinant had the same specific activity as the carbonic anhydrase purified from rat liver, but it had virtually no phosphatase activity. We attempted to identify an activator of the phosphatase in rat liver and found a protein of approximately 14 kDa, the amount of which correlated with the phosphatase activity of the carbonic anhydrase III fractions. It was identified as liver fatty acid binding protein, which was then purified to test for activity as an activator of the phosphatase and for protein-protein interaction, but neither binding nor activation could be demonstrated. Immunoprecipitation experiments established that carbonic anhydrase III could be separated from the phosphatase activity. Finally, adding additional purification steps completely separated the phosphatase activity from the carbonic anhydrase activity. We conclude that the phosphatase activity previously considered to be intrinsic to carbonic anhydrase III is actually extrinsic. Thus, this isozyme exhibits only the carbon dioxide hydratase and esterase activities characteristic of the other mammalian isozymes, and the phosphatase previously shown to be activated by glutathionylation is not carbonic anhydrase III.  相似文献   

10.
By affinity chromatography the isozymic distribution of carbonic anhydrase (carbonate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.1) has been studied in extract from various bovine tissues. Carbonic anhydrase II forms isolated from erythrocyte, kidney and brain are indistinguishable by specific activity, amino acid composition, fingerprint, electrophoretic and immunological behaviour. By these criteria they differ from carbonic anhydrase I isolated from rumen epithelium.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Carbonic anhydrase III, a cytosolic enzyme found predominantly in skeletal muscle, has a turnover rate for CO2 hydration 500-fold lower and a KI for inhibition by acetazolamide 700-fold higher (at pH 7.2) than those of red cell carbonic anhydrase II. Mutants of human carbonic anhydrase III were made by replacing three residues near the active site with amino acids known to be at the corresponding positions in isozyme II (Lys-64----His, Arg-67----Asn, and Phe-198----Leu). Catalytic properties were measured by stopped-flow spectrophotometry and 18O exchange between CO2 and water using mass spectrometry. The triple mutant of isozyme III had a turnover rate for CO2 hydration 500-fold higher than wild-type carbonic anhydrase III. The binding constants, KI, for sulfonamide inhibitors of the mutants containing Leu-198 were comparable to those of carbonic anhydrase II. The mutations at residues 64, 67, and 198 were catalytically independent; the lowered energy barrier for the triple mutant was the sum of the energy changes for each of the single mutants. Moreover, the triple mutant of isozyme III catalyzed the hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate with a specific activity and pH dependence similar to those of isozyme II. Phe-198 is thus a major contributor to the low CO2 hydration activity, the weak binding of acetazolamide, and the low pKa of the zinc-bound water in carbonic anhydrase III. Intramolecular proton transfer involving His-64 was necessary for maximal turnover.  相似文献   

13.
The three-dimensional structure of bovine carbonic anhydrase III (BCA III) from red skeletal muscle cells has been determined by molecular replacement methods. The structure has been refined at 2.0 Å resolution by both constrained and restrained structure-factor least squares refinement. The current crystallographic R-value is 19.2% and 121 solvent molecules have so far been found associated with the protein. The structure is highly similar to the refined structure of human carbonic anhydrase II. Some differences in amino acid sequence and structure between the two isoenzymes are discussed. In BCA III, Lys 64 and Arg 91 (His 64 and Ile 91 in HCA II) are both pointing out from the active site cavity forming salt bridges with Glu 4 and Asp 72 (His 4 and Asp 72 in HCA II), respectively. However, Arg 67 and Phe 198 (Asn 67 and Leu 198 in HCA II) are oriented towards the zinc ion and significantly reduce the volume of the active site cavity. Phe 198 particularly reduces the size of the substrate binding region at the “deep water” position at the bottom of the cavity and we sugest that this is one of the major reasons for the differences in catalytic properties of isoenzyme III as compared to isozyme II. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
The localization of carbonic anhydrase in the sperm storage regions of turkey and quail was investigated using a histochemical method showing the activity of all the isozymes present. Intense carbonic anhydrase activity was found in the turkey sperm storage tubules and infundibular storage glands, whereas no activity could be detected in the quail at these sites. Both species did, however, show strong membrane-bound and cytoplasmic activity in the non-ciliated cells of the utero-vaginal surface epithelium and scattered cells of the vaginal epithelium. The enzyme catalyses the reaction , and the presence of carbonic anhydrase in these regions makes rapid changes in pH possible. It is suggested that increasing pH and/or the addition of bicarbonate stimulates sperm motility needed during transfer of the oviducal lumen. A lowering of the pH would keep the sperm qui escent during storage. The duration of sperm storage is considerably longer in the turkey than in the quail. The high quantity of carbonic anhydrase in the turkey sperm storage tubules may, thus, play a role in the duration of sperm storage.  相似文献   

15.
Cobalt(III)bovine carbonic anhydrase B was prepared by the oxidation of the cobalt(II) enzyme with hydrogen peroxide and was purified by affinity chromatography. The oxidation reaction is inhibited by specific inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase. The inhibition is explained by the fact that the Co(II)-enzyme . inhibitor complex cannot be directly oxidized by hydrogen peroxide, but has to dissociate to give free Co(II) enzyme which is then oxidized. The Co(III) ion in Co(III) carbonic anhydrase cannot be directly substituted by zinc ions. It can be reduced by either dithionite or BH-4 ions to give, first, their complexes with the Co(II) enzyme, and upon their removal, a fully active Co(II) enzyme. Cyanide and azide bind to cobalt(III) carbonic anhydrase with similar rate constants of 0.060 +/- 0.005 and 0.070 +/- 0.007 M-1 S-1 respectively. These rates are faster than those found for Co(III) inorganic complexes. The Co(III) ion in both Co(III) carbonic anhydrase and Co(III) carboxypeptidase A was found to be diamagnetic, indicating a near octahedral symmetry.  相似文献   

16.
1. High activity (CA C) and low activity (CA B) carbonic anhydrase isoenzymes have been purified from turtle erythrocytes. 2. The two isoenzymes differed in CO2 hydration specific activity by 36-fold. 3. The low activity isoenzyme contained one half-cystine residue, whereas the high activity isoenzyme contained four half-cystines and required a reducing environment to maintain activity. Both isoenzymes contained zinc. 4. Molecular weights of 28,500 and 30,400 daltons were established for the low and high activity isoenzymes respectively. 5. Both isoenzymes were inhibited by acetazolamide, but only the high activity isoenzyme was inhibited by parachloromercuribenzoate. 6. The low activity isoenzyme was present in the erythrocytes at about 8-10 times the concentration of the high activity isoenzyme. 7. The high activity isoenzyme cross-reacted with antibodies prepared against pure chicken carbonic anhydrase C.  相似文献   

17.
We report here 1) the synthesis and properties of a new macromolecular carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, Prontosil-dextran, 2) its application to determine the localization of a previously described extracellular carbonic anhydrase in skeletal muscle, and 3) the application of a recently published histochemical technique using dansylsulfonamide to the same problem. Stable macromolecular inhibitors of molecular weights of 5,000, 100,000 and 1,000,000 were produced by covalently coupling the sulfonamide Prontosil to dextrans. Their inhibition constants towards bovine carbonic anhydrase II are 1-2 X 10(-7) M. The Prontosil-dextrans, PD 5,000, PD 100,000, and PD 1,000,000, were used in studies of the washout of H14CO3-) from the perfused rabbit hindlimb. This washout is slow due to the presence of an extracellular carbonic anhydrase and can be markedly accelerated by PD 5,000 but not by PD 100,000 and PD 1,000,000. Since PD 5,000 is accessible to the entire extracellular space and PD 100,000 and PD 1,000,000 are confined to the intravascular space, we conclude that the extracellular carbonic anhydrase of skeletal muscle is located in the interstitium. The histochemical studies show a strong staining of the sarcolemma of the muscle fibers with high oxidative capacity. It appears likely, therefore, that the extracellular carbonic anhydrase of skeletal muscle is associated with muscle plasma membranes with its active site directed toward the interstitial space.  相似文献   

18.
Three distinct isoenzymes of acid phosphatase have been separated from extracts of m.gastrocnemius of normal and of vitamin E deficient rabbits by gel filtration and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These isoenzymes, termed I, II and III, have molecular weights of: 110,000--130,000, 60,000--78,000 and 12,500--14,500. Isoenzymes I and II split the substrates 4-methylumbelliferyl phosphate and naphthol AS-BI phosphate and the activity is strongly increased in the muscles of vitamin E deficient rabbits. Isoenzyme III splits only 4-methylumbelliferyl phosphate and the activity is not increased in the muscles of vitamin E deficient rabbits. The pH-optimum for isoenzymes I and II is 4.8 and for isoenzyme III 5.5. It has been shown that the histochemical semipermeable membrane technique, using substrate naphthol AS-BI phosphate, is a very reliable technique for demonstrating activity of the isoenzymes I and II in tissue sections. On the other hand, activity of isoenzyme III cannot be demonstrated with this histochemical technique. In pathologically altered muscles, the activity of the isoenzymes I and II is greatly increased whilst the activity of isoenzyme III is not significantly altered.  相似文献   

19.
Procedures for isolating carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) enzymes from the erythrocytes and the mucosae of the gastrointestinal tract of guinea pigs are described. From a haemolysate, haemoglobin was removed by the addition of ammonium sulphate, and also by two other methods, namely by gel filtration or by adsorption on DEAE-Sephadex. The crude enzyme thus obtained was resolved into the different isoenzymes by chromatography with DEAE-cellulose. From particle-free supernatants of homogenates of some gastrointestinal tissues, carbonic anhydrases were purified by ammonium sulphate fractionation, gel filtration, and ion-exchange chromatography with DEAE-cellulose. The major isoenzymes from blood, stomach, proximal colonic mucosa and caecal mucosa were homogeneous during ion-exchange chromatography, acrylamide-gel electrophoresis, and centrifugal examination. From these tissues, carbonic anhydrase was isolated as two major isoenzymes. They resemble the pairs of isoenzymes discovered in the bloods of other species. The carbon dioxide hydratase activity of one isoenzyme (;high activity' carbonic anhydrase) was 40 times that of the other isoenzyme (;low activity' carbonic anhydrase), as measured at a single substrate concentration. Two other minor components of the enzyme are also found in guinea-pig erythrocytes. All of the enzymes isolated had molecular weights of nearly 30000 (sedimentation equilibrium). ;High activity' carbonic anhydrases from blood and gastrointestinal tissues were indistinguishable according to some chemical, physical and kinetic measurements; similarly ;low activity' carbonic anhydrases from those tissues were indistinguishable. ;High activity' carbonic anhydrase was markedly different from the ;low activity' carbonic anhydrase with respect to its amino acid composition, chromatographic behaviour and isoelectric pH value. Marked differences were also found in the tissue concentrations of the major isoenzymes. It is suggested that the characteristic and selective distribution of the different forms of carbonic anhydrase in the guinea-pig tissues is related to the specific and different physiological functions of the enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
The isoenzymes carbonic anhydrase II (CAII) and III (CAIII) have been measured by radioimmunoassay in the livers of male and female rats aged from 21 to 800 days. No sexual dimorphism at 21 days was found, but from 50 to 400 days both isoenzymes show sexual differences. From 600 days onwards, these differences are less apparent. CAIII concentrations in two 'fast' fibre muscles and one 'slow' fibre muscle have been determined. There is no sexual dimorphism in muscle, but a wide variation between individuals was observed. Fast muscles show maximal CAIII levels at 800 days, whereas in slow muscle the concentration of the isoenzyme is declining at this time.  相似文献   

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