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1.
The inhibition by cupric ions of the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase II is interesting because of the results of Tuet al. obtained at chemical equilibrium, indicating that Cu2+ inhibits specifically a proton transfer in the catalytic pathway. We have measured this inhibition at steady state, using stopped-flow methods. The inhibition by Cu2+ of the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase II had aK I near 1×10?6 M atpH 7.0 and gave inhibition that is noncompetitive atpH 6.0 and mixed, but close to uncompetitive, atpH 6.8. ThepH dependence of this binding is consistent with a binding site for Cu2+ on the enzyme with apK a near 7. The binding interaction between Cu2+ and the fluorescent inhibitor 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-l-sulfonamide on carbonic anhydrase II was noncompetitive, indicating that the binding site for Cu2+ is distinct from the coordination sphere of zinc in which the actual interconversion of CO2 and HCO 3 ? and the binding of sulfonamides takes place.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
Various ring- and nitrogen-substituted benzenesulphonamides have been prepared and tested as potential inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase. N-Methoxysulphonamides showed no inhibitory activity, as predicted by the classic work of Krebs on N-substituted inhibitors. By contrast, N-hydroxysulphonamides proved to be very effective inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase. Using 111Cd-NMR it has been possible to analyse the molecular interaction of 4-fluoro-N-hydroxybenzenesulphon[15N]amide, with 111Cd-substituted bovine carbonic anhydrase. A large cadmium-111:nitrogen-15 spin-coupling shows that this inhibitor is directly bound to the metal via its nitrogen rather than through an oxygen atom. The mode of this binding is similar to that for the unsubstituted sulphonamide inhibitor, 4-fluorobenzenesulphon[15N]amide. The 111Cd-chemical shift of the signal for the inhibited enzyme shows that the N-hydroxysulphonamide is bound as its anion. From the relative intensities of free and complexed enzyme signals it can be deduced that the cadmium enzyme complex with the N-hydroxysulphonamide has a longer life-time than that formed with the unsubstituted sulphonamide. By contrast, native zinc-containing bovine carbonic anhydrase shows similar I50 values with both of these sulphonamides. Attempts to monitor the binding using 15N-NMR were unsuccessful, possibly due to a very long relaxation time for the nitrogen nucleus in the N-hydroxysulphonamide when bound to the enzyme leading to loss of the 15N signal.  相似文献   

5.
C K Tu  D N Silverman 《Biochemistry》1985,24(21):5881-5887
We have measured the catalysis by Co(II)-substituted bovine carbonic anhydrase II from red cells of the exchange of 18O between CO2 and H2O using membrane-inlet mass spectrometry. We chose Co(II)-substituted carbonic anhydrase II because the apparent equilibrium dissociation constant of HCO3- and enzyme at pH 7.4, KHCO3-eff approximately equal to 55 mM, was within a practicable range of substrate concentrations for the 18O method. For the native, zinc-containing enzyme KHCO3-eff is close to 500 mM at this pH. The rate constant for the release from the active site of water bearing substrate oxygen kH2O was dependent on the fraction of enzyme that was free, not bound by substrate HCO3- or anions. The pH dependence of kH2O in the pH range 6.0-9.0 can be explained entirely by a rate-limiting, intramolecular proton transfer between cobalt-bound hydroxide and a nearby group, probably His-64. The rate constant for this proton transfer was found to be 7 X 10(5) S-1 for the Co(II)-substituted enzyme and 2 X 10(6) S-1 for the native enzyme. These results are applied to models derived from proton-relaxation enhancement of water exchanging from the inner coordination shell of the cobalt in carbonic anhydrase. The anions iodide, cyanate, and thiocyanate inhibited catalysis of 18O exchange by Co(II)-substituted carbonic anhydrase II in a manner competitive with total substrate (CO2 and HCO3-) at chemical equilibrium and pH 7.4. These results are discussed in terms of observed steady-state inhibition patterns and suggest that there is no significant contribution of a ternary complex between substrate, inhibitor, and enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
The visible absorption of crystals of Co(II)-substituted human carbonic anhydrase II (Co(II)-HCA II) were measured over a pH range of 6.0-11.0 giving an estimate of pKa 8.4 for the ionization of the metal-bound water in the crystal. This is higher by about 1.2 pKa units than the pKa near 7.2 for Co(II)-CA II in solution. This effect is attributed to a nonspecific ionic strength effect of 1.4 M citrate in the precipitant solution used in the crystal growth. A pKa of 8.3 for the aqueous ligand of the cobalt was measured for Co(II)-HCA II in solution containing 0.8 M citrate. Citrate is not an inhibitor of the catalytic activity of Co(II)-HCA II and was not observed in crystal structures. The X-ray structures at 1.5-1.6 Å resolution of Co(II)-HCA II were determined for crystals prepared at pH 6.0, 8.5 and 11.0 and revealed no conformational changes of amino-acid side chains as a result of the use of citrate. However, the studies of Co(II)-HCA II did reveal a change in metal coordination from tetrahedral at pH 11 to a coordination consistent with a mixed population of both tetrahedral and penta-coordinate at pH 8.5 to an octahedral geometry characteristic of the oxidized enzyme Co(III)-HCA II at pH 6.0.  相似文献   

7.
Using stopped flow methods, we have measured the steady state rate constants and the inhibition by N3- and I- of the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase III from cat muscle. Also, using fluorescence quenching of the enzyme at 330 nm, we have measured the binding of the sulfonamide chlorzolamide to cat carbonic anhydrase III. Inhibition by the anions was uncompetitive at pH 6.0 and was mixed at higher values of pH. The inhibition constant of azide was independent of pH between 6.0 and 7.5 with a value of KIintercept = 2 X 10(-5) M; the binding constant of chlorzolamide to cat carbonic anhydrase III was also independent of pH in the range of 6.0 to 7.5 with a value Kdiss = 2 X 10(-6) M. Both of these values increased as pH increased above 8. There was a competition between chlorzolamide and the anions N-3 and OCN- for binding sites on cat carbonic anhydrase III. The pH profiles for the kinetic constants and the uncompetitive inhibition at pH 6.0 can be explained by an activity-controlling group in cat carbonic anhydrase III with a pKa less than 6. Moreover, the data suggest that like isozyme II, cat isozyme III is limited in rate by a step occurring outside the actual interconversion of CO2 and HCO3- and involving a change in bonding to hydrogen exchangeable with solvent water.  相似文献   

8.
To test the hypothesis that histidine 64 in carbonic anhydrase II has a crucial role as a 'proton shuttle group' during catalysis of CO2-HCO3- interconversion, this residue was replaced by lysine, glutamine, glutamic acid and alanine by site-directed mutagenesis. All these variants turned out to have high CO2 hydration activities. The kcat values at pH 8.8 and 25 degrees C were only reduced by 1.5-3.5-fold compared to the unmodified enzyme. These results show that intramolecular proton transfer via His 64 is not a dominating pathway in the catalytic reaction. The variants also catalyze the hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate. The pKa values for the activity-controlling group are between 6.8 and 7.0 for all studied forms of the enzyme except the Glu 64 variant which shows a complex pH dependence with the major pKa shifted to 8.4.  相似文献   

9.
J Y Liang  W N Lipscomb 《Biochemistry》1988,27(23):8676-8682
The energy barrier for the intramolecular proton transfer between zinc-bound water and His 64 in the active site of human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) has been studied at the partial retention of diatomic differential overlap (PRDDO) level. The most important stabilizing factor for the intramolecular proton transfer is the zinc ion, which lowers the pKa of zinc-bound water and electrostatically repels the proton. The energy barrier of 127.5 kcal/mol for proton transfer between a water dimer is completely removed in the presence of the zinc ion. The zinc ligands, which donate electrons to the zinc ion, raise the barrier slightly to 34 kcal/mol for a 4-coordinated zinc complex including three imidazole ligands from His 94, His 96, and His 119 and to 54 kcal/mol for the 5-coordinated zinc complex including the fifth water ligand. A few model calculations indicate that these energy barriers are expected to be reduced to within experimental range (approximately 10 kcal/mol) when large basis set, correlation energies, and molecular dynamics are considered. The proton-transfer group, which functions as proton receiver in the intramolecular proton transfer, helps to attract the proton; and the partially ordered active site water molecules are important for proton relay function.  相似文献   

10.
The binding of N3- to Co(II)-substituted bovine carbonic anhydrase III was measured at various pH values by spectrophotometric titrations. The apparent Ki values were found to increase with pH in the studied range between pH 5.8 and 8.9. The inhibition of CO2 hydration by N-3 was found to be essentially uncompetitive at all investigated pH values (pH 6.3-8.9). The Ki values for the inhibition of kcat are much smaller than those obtained in the spectrophotometric titrations indicating that an enzyme form with a high affinity for N-3, presumably having a metal-bound H2O, accumulates in the steady state at saturating CO2 concentrations. Assuming that the low pH limit of Ki = 9 microM for the inhibition of kcat represents the affinity of N-3 for the Co(II)-OH2 form, a pKa value near 5 can be estimated for Co(II)-bound water from the pH dependence of N-3 binding in the absence of CO2. Measurements of time-resolved absorption spectra during CO2 hydration in the presence of a low N-3 concentration showed the transient appearance of the characteristic spectrum of the enzyme-N-3 adduct clearly demonstrating the accumulation in the steady state of an enzyme form with a high affinity for N-3. In similar experiments without inhibitor the transient formation of a spectral form corresponding to a Co(II)-OH2 species has been demonstrated. This spectral form is rather featureless lacking the absorption maxima at 618 nm and 640 nm characteristic of the Co(II)-OH- species. Our results strongly support the hypothesis that the rate-limiting step in CO2 hydration catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase III is the protolysis of metal-bound water.  相似文献   

11.
Carbonic anhydrase is a valuable and efficient catalyst for CO2 hydration. Most often the free enzyme is employed which complicates catalyst recycling, and can increase cost due to the need for protein purification. Immobilization of the enzyme may address these shortcomings. Here we report the development of whole‐cell biocatalysts for CO2 hydration via periplasmic expression of two forms of carbonic anhydrase in Escherichia coli using two different targeting sequences. The enzymatic turnover numbers (kcat) and catalytic efficiencies (kcat/KM) were decreased by an order of magnitude as compared to the free soluble enzyme, indicating the introduction of transport limitations. However, the thermal stabilities were improved for most configurations (>88% activity retention up to 95°C for three of four whole‐cell biocatalysts), operational stabilities were more than satisfactory (100% retention after 24 h of use for all four whole‐cell biocatalysts), and CO2 hydration was significantly enhanced relative to the uncatalyzed reaction (~50–70% increase in CaCO3 precipitate formed). A significant advantage of the whole‐cell approach is that protein purification is no longer necessary, and the cells can be easily separated and recycled in future applications including biofuel production, biosensors, and carbon capture and storage. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2013; 110: 1865–1873. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
A kinetic study of CO(2) hydration was carried out using the water-soluble zinc model complex with water-soluble nitrilotris(2-benzimidazolylmethyl-6-sulfonate) L1S, [L1SZn(OH(2))](-), mimicking the active site of carbonic anhydrase, in the presence and absence of anion inhibitors NCS(-) and Cl(-). The obtained rate constants k(cat) for CO(2) hydration were 5.9x10(2), 1. 7x10(3), and 3.1x10(3) M(-1) s(-1) at 5, 10, and 15 degrees C, respectively: the k(cat)=ca. 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) extrapolated towards 25 degrees C has been the largest among the reported k(cat) using zinc model complexes for carbonic anhydrase. It was also revealed that NCS(-), Cl(-) and acetazolamide play a role of inhibitors by the decrease of k(cat): 7x10(2) and 2x10(3) M(-1) s(-1) for NCS(-) and Cl(-) at 15 degrees C, respectively. The sequence of their magnitudes in k(cat) is Cl(-) approximately acetazolamide>NCS(-), where the sequence Cl(-)>NCS(-) is confirmed for native carbonic anhydrase. The difference of k(cat) or k(obs) between NCS(-) and Cl(-) resulted from that between the stability constants K(st)=2x10(3) for [L1SZn(NCS)](2-) and 1x10(2) M(-1) for [L1SZnCl](2-) in D(2)O: for water-insoluble tris(2-benzimidazolylmethyl)amine L1, K(st)=1.8x10(4) for [L1Zn(NCS)](2-) and 1.5x10(3) M(-1) for [L1ZnCl](2-)in CD(3)CN/D(2)O (50% v/v). The crystal structure of anion-binding zinc model complexes [L1Zn(OH(2))](0.5)[L1ZnCl](0.5) (ClO(4))(1.5) 1(0.5)2(0.5)(ClO(4))(1.5) was revealed by X-ray crystallography. The geometry around Zn(2+) in 1 and 2 was tetrahedrally coordinated by three benzimidazolyl nitrogen atoms and one oxygen atom of H(2)O, or Cl(-).  相似文献   

13.
Catalysis of CO2 reactions by lung carbonic anhydrase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
  相似文献   

14.
The inhibition by cupric ions of the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase II is interesting because of the results of Tuet al. obtained at chemical equilibrium, indicating that Cu2+ inhibits specifically a proton transfer in the catalytic pathway. We have measured this inhibition at steady state, using stopped-flow methods. The inhibition by Cu2+ of the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase II had aK I near 1×10–6 M atpH 7.0 and gave inhibition that is noncompetitive atpH 6.0 and mixed, but close to uncompetitive, atpH 6.8. ThepH dependence of this binding is consistent with a binding site for Cu2+ on the enzyme with apK a near 7. The binding interaction between Cu2+ and the fluorescent inhibitor 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-l-sulfonamide on carbonic anhydrase II was noncompetitive, indicating that the binding site for Cu2+ is distinct from the coordination sphere of zinc in which the actual interconversion of CO2 and HCO 3 and the binding of sulfonamides takes place.  相似文献   

15.
The three-dimensional structure of a possible intermediate in the hydration reaction of cyanamide to urea catalyzed by human carbonic anhydrase II (hCAII) has been determined by cryocrystallographic techniques. The crystal structure shows that two different adducts are formed under the experimental conditions and that they have different occupancy in the crystal. The high occupancy form consists of a binary hCAII-cyanamide complex where the substrate has replaced the zinc-bound hydroxide anion present in the native enzyme, maintaining the tetrahedral geometry around the metal ion. The second, low-occupancy form consists of a hCAII-cyanamide-water ternary complex where the catalytic zinc ion, still being bound to cyanamide, is approached by a water molecule in a five-coordinate adduct. While the first form can be considered a nonproductive complex, the second form may represent an intermediate state of the catalyzed reaction where the water molecule is about to perform a nucleophilic attack on the zinc-activated cyanamide substrate. The structural evidence is consistent with the kinetic data previously reported about this recently described hydrolytic reaction catalyzed by hCAII, and indicates that a different mechanism with respect to that generally accepted for the physiologic carbon dioxide hydration reaction may be adopted by the enzyme, depending on the substrate chemical properties.  相似文献   

16.
Sperm motility in flatfishes shows unique characteristics. The flagellar movement either in vivo or in permeabilized models is arrested by the presence of 25-100 mM HCO3-, or by gentle perfusion with CO2 gas. To understand the molecular basis of this property, sperm Triton-soluble proteins and flagellar proteins from several species were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. An abundant 29-kDa protein was observed only in flatfish species. Partial amino acid sequences identified this protein as a carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme involved in the interconversion of CO2 and HCO3-. 6-ethoxyzolamide, a specific inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase inhibits sperm motility, especially at low pH. In the case of HCO3(-)-arrested sperm, the motility is restored by addition of 6-ethoxyzolamide. Taken together, these results suggest that a novel pH/HCO3(-)-dependent regulatory mechanism mediated by carbonic anhydrase is involved in the motility control in flatfish sperm.  相似文献   

17.
The partially hydrophilic and hydrophobic tripodal ligands, tris(hydroxy-2-benzimidazolylmethyl)amine L1h and tris(2-benzimidazolyl)amine L1 were used for the preparation of biomimetic complex of carbonic anhydrase. The CO(2) hydration using [L1hZn(OH)]ClO(4).1.5H(2)O provided the zinc-bound and free HCO(3)(-)s, which were formed by nucleophilic attack of Zn-OH toward CO(2) in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). The phenolic OH in L1h can recognize water molecules through hydrogen bonds to facilitate the collection of the water molecules around a biomimetic zinc compound; the molecular structure of [L1hZn(OH)](+) was revealed. The packing diagram has demonstrated the all the water molecules are hydrogen bonded to each phenolic OH. The nucleophilic attack of zinc-bound OH(-) to substrate is used to catalyze the CO(2) hydration and phosphoester hydrolysis. The carbonic anhydrase model compound [L1Zn(OH(2))](2+) was applied for the hydrolysis of phosphoesters, parathion and bis(p-nitrophenyl)phosphate (BNPP(-)). The low reactivity of [L1Zn(OH)](+) for parathion hydrolysis is attributed to the stability of the intermediate [L1Zn(OP(S)(OEt)(2))](+). Since the structures of the intermediates [L1Zn(OH(2))](BNPP)(2) (1) and [L1Zn(OP(S)(OEt)(2))]ClO(4) (2) formed on the way of hydrolysis are too stable to realize the catalytic cycle and are not active for hydrolysis, carbonic anhydrase model compound [L1Zn(OH(2))](2+) was not suitable for phosphoester hydrolysis; the zinc model compound surrounded by three benzimidazolyl groups is used to have the steric hindrance for bulky substrate, such as parathion and BNPP(-).  相似文献   

18.
Magnetic circular dichroism of Co (II) carbonic anhydrase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
  相似文献   

19.
20.
To find a disulfide pair that could stabilize the enzyme human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II), we grafted the disulfide bridge from the related and unusually stable carbonic anhydrase form from Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NGCA) into the human enzyme. Thus, the two Cys residues at positions 23 and 203 were engineered into a pseudo-wild-type form of HCA II (C206S), giving the mutant C206S/A23C/L203C. The disulfide bond was not formed spontaneously. The native state of the reduced form of the mutant was markedly destabilized (2.9 kcal/mol) compared to that of HCA II. Formation of a disulfide bridge was achieved by treatment by oxidized glutathione. This led to a significant stabilization of the native conformation. Compared to HCA II the unfolding midpoint for the variant was increased from 0.9 to 1.7 M guanidine HCl, corresponding to a stabilization of 3.7 kcal/mol. This makes the human enzyme almost as stable as the model protein NGCA, for which the unfolding of the native state has a midpoint at 2.1 M guanidine HCl. The stabilized protein underwent, contrary to all other investigated variants of HCA II, an apparent two-state unfolding transition, as judged from intrinsic Trp fluorescence measurements. A molten-globule intermediate is nevertheless formed but is suppressed because of the high denaturant pressure it faces upon rupture of the native state.  相似文献   

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