首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
We have reacted acrolein with human carbonic anhydrase II using conditions reported to result in maximal formylethylation of exposed histidine and lysine residues (Pocker, Y., and Janji?, N. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 6169-6176). Pocker and Janji? proposed that the decrease by 95-98% in the steady-state turnover number for the hydration of CO2 caused by this chemical modification is due predominantly to the alkylation of one residue, the imidazole side chain of histidine 64. We measured the rate of 18O exchange between CO2 and water catalyzed by these enzymes at chemical equilibrium using membrane inlet mass spectrometry. The catalyzed rate of interconversion of CO2 and HCO3- at chemical equilibrium was the same for the acrolein-modified and the unmodified carbonic anhydrases, but the rate of release of 18O-labeled water from the active site had decreased by as much as 85% for the acrolein-modified enzyme. The 18O-exchange kinetics catalyzed by the acrolein-modified carbonic anhydrase II was similar to that catalyzed by a mutant human carbonic anhydrase II in which histidine at residue 64 was replaced with alanine. Moreover, modification of this mutant carbonic anhydrase II with acrolein did not alter to a significant extent its 18O-exchange pattern. These results support the proposal of Pocker and Janji? and the suggested role of histidine 64 in carbonic anhydrase II as a proton shuttle residue that transfers a proton from zinc-bound water to buffer in solution.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
Phosphate and phosphate-containing buffers of physiological interest such as ATP and 3-phosphoglycerate were found to enhance catalysis by human carbonic anhydrase III (HCA III). Addition of phosphate caused an increase in both the catalyzed rate of hydration of CO2 at steady state measured by stopped-flow spectrophotometry and the exchange of 18O between CO2 and water at chemical equilibrium measured by mass spectrometry. The results are consistent with a mechanism in which phosphate enhances the transfer of protons between zinc-bound water at the active site and solution. Site-directed mutations to replace lysine 64 and arginine 67 in the active-site cavity resulted in greater enhancement by phosphate when compared with wild-type HCA III and showed that these basic residues are not essential as a binding site for phosphate. Phosphate did not enhance catalysis by HCA II.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

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.
The maximal velocity of catalysis of CO(2) hydration by human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) requires proton transfer from zinc-bound water to solution assisted by His 64. The catalytic activity of a site-specific mutant of HCA II in which His 64 is replaced with Ala (H64A HCA II) can be rescued by exogenous proton donors/acceptors, usually derivatives of imidazole and pyridine. X-ray crystallography has identified Trp 5 as a binding site of the rescue agent 4-methylimidazole (4-MI) on H64A HCA II. This binding site overlaps with the "out" position in which His 64 in wild-type HCA II points away from the zinc. Activation by 4-MI as proton donor/acceptor in catalysis was determined in the dehydration direction using (18)O exchange between CO(2) and water and in the hydration direction by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Replacement of Trp 5 by Ala, Leu, or Phe in H64A HCA II had no significant effect on enhancement by 4-MI of maximal rate constants for proton transfer in catalysis to levels near 10(5) s(-1). This high activity for chemical rescue indicates that the binding site of 4-MI at Trp 5 in H64A HCA II appears to be a nonproductive binding site, although it is possible that a similarly effective pathway for proton transfer exists in the mutants lacking Trp 5. Moreover, the data suggest that the out position of His 64 considered alone is not active in proton transfer in HCA II. In contrast to isozyme II, the replacement of Trp 5 by Ala in HCA III abolished chemical rescue of k(cat) by imidazole but left k(cat)/K(m) for hydration unchanged. This demonstrates that Trp 5 contributes to the predominant productive binding site for imidazole, with a maximal level for the rate constant of proton transfer near 10(4) s(-1). This difference in the susceptibility of CA II and III to chemical rescue may be related to the more sterically constrained and electrostatically positive nature of the active site cavity of CA III compared with CA II. The possibility of nonproductive binding sites for exogenous proton donors offers an explanation for the unusually low value of the intrinsic kinetic barrier obtained by application of Marcus theory to chemical rescue of H64A HCA II.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The rate of ferritin formation in the buffers 4-morpholinepropanesulphonic acid (Mops), 4-morpholineethanesulphonic acid (Mes) and imidazole at pH values from 5.0 to 6.5 is quite similar. However, the rate of iron deposition is much greater in Mops and Mes at pH values above 6.5 than in imidazole. Increasing the concentration of imidazole inhibits ferritin formation and also leads to a transformation in the shape of the kinetic curves observed. This inhibiton is also observed at constant ionic strength but is not found for non-complexing buffers such as Mops. An inhibition of ferritin formation in imidazole and in Mops buffers is also observed with increasing ionic strength. We conclude that the unprotonated form of imidazole inhibits iron deposition, possibly by binding to the active site of the apoferritin molecule. The temperature dependence of iron deposition was examined. An optimum temperature of 50 degrees C was found but the Arrhenius plots were non-linear. On the basis of these and previous results, a kinetic model is developed which accounts well for ferritin formation at pH values below 6.5 and above 7.0 in non-complexing buffers. The model does not account for the kinetics observed at pH values close to neutrality.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The present work demonstrates that the high-activity zinc metalloenzyme, carbonic anhydrase (CA II) from bovine erythrocytes is inhibited by the cyclic sulfimide, saccharin, and 2- and 4-carbobenzoxybenzene sulfonamide. A spectrophotometric method was employed to monitor the enzymatically catalyzed hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl acetate by following the increase in absorbance at 410 nm which accompanies p-nitrophenoxide/p-nitrophenol formation. The more rapid enzymatic hydration of CO2 was monitored by using a stopped-flow spectrophotometer as well as by a modified colorimetric method of Wilbur and Anderson. The studies show that, at a given molar ratio of inhibitor to enzyme, the degree of inhibition of the enzymaic hydration of CO2 and hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl acetate by the inhibitory compounds is essentially the same. Kinetic analyses were made at 25.0 degrees at pH 6.5 (MES buffers), pH 6.9 (HEPES buffers) and pH 7.9 (HEPES buffers) with ionic strength regulated by the addition of appropriate quantities of sodium sulfate. Lineweaver-Burk plots were used to evaluate apparent inhibition constants for each of the three inhibitors. For all the inhibitors studied, inhibition appears to be mixed (competitive/noncompetitive). For saccharin in the presence of sodium sulfate, the extent of inhibition is considerably decreased. It was found for the three inhibitors that the inhibitory potency decreases with increasing pH, and that the inhibitory potency is extremely sensitive to the shape of these rather closely related molecules. For example, apparent inhibition constants for the enzymatic hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl acetate at pH 6.9 were Ki (saccharin) = 0.20 mM, Ki (2-carbobenzoxybenzene sulfonamide) = 0.54 mM and Ki (4-carbobenzoxybenzene sulfonamide) = 1.6 microM. For the enzymatic hydration of CO2 at pH 6.9, 0.10 mM saccharin caused 50% inhibition while 7.0 nM 4-carbobenzoxybenzene sulfonamide resulted in 50% inhibition. The results suggest that sulfonamide inhibition is caused by formation of a monodentate ligand at the zinc ion of the enzyme active site and that the more linear 4-carbobenzoxybenzene sulfonamide is better able to enter a conical enzyme active site than is 2-carbobenzoxybenzene sulfonamide or saccharin.  相似文献   

14.
Rates of CO2/HCO-3 exchange, catalyzed by human carbonic anhydrase I (or B) at chemical equilibrium, were estimated from the nuclear magnetic resonance linewidths of 13C-labeled substrates. The results show that the maximal exchange rate constant is independent of pH in the range 5.7-8.0, whereas the apparent substrate dissociation constant depends on pH. Exchange proceeds rapidly in the absence of added buffers, and the addition of buffers has negligible effects on exchange rates. Exchange is equally rapid with 1H2O or 2H2O as solvents. Chloride ions inhibit CO2/HCO-3 exchange competitively. The maximal exchange rates obtained with human carbonic anhydrase I are 50 times slower than those obtained with human isoenzyme II (or C). From a comparison of the exchange kinetics with the steady-state kinetics of CO2 hydration and HCO-3 dehydration it is tentatively concluded that the transfer of H+ between active site and medium proceeds with rates of similar magnitudes in the two isoenzymes, whereas the central catalytic step, the interconversion of enzyme-bound CO2 and HCO-3, is much slower in isoenzyme I than in isoenzyme II.  相似文献   

15.
The oxygenated form of myoglobin or hemoglobin is oxidized easily to the ferric met-form with generation of the superoxide anion. To make clear the possible role(s) of the distal histidine (H64) residue in the reaction, we have carried out detailed pH-dependence studies of the autoxidation rate, using some typical H64 mutants of sperm whale myoglobin, over the wide range of pH 5-12 in 0.1 M buffer at 25 degrees C. Each mutation caused a dramatic increase in the autoxidation rate with the trend H64V >/= H64G >/= H64L > H64Q > H64 (wild-type) at pH 7.0, whereas each mutant protein showed a characteristic pH-profile which is essentially different from that of the wild-type or native sperm whale MbO2. In particular, all the mutants have lost the acid-catalyzed process that can play a dominant role in the autoxidation reaction of most mammalian myoglobins or hemoglobins. Kinetic analyses of various types of pH-profiles lead us to conclude that the distal histidine residue can play a dual role in the nucleophilic displacement of O2- from MbO2 or HbO2 in protic, aqueous solution. One is in a proton-relay mechanism via its imidazole ring, and the other is in the maximum protection of the FeO2 center against a water molecule or an hydroxyl ion that can enter the heme pocket from the surrounding solvent.  相似文献   

16.
Tripp BC  Ferry JG 《Biochemistry》2000,39(31):9232-9240
Four glutamate residues in the prototypic gamma-class carbonic anhydrase from Methanosarcina thermophila (Cam) were characterized by site-directed mutagenesis and chemical rescue studies. Alanine substitution indicated that an external loop residue, Glu 84, and an internal active site residue, Glu 62, are both important for CO(2) hydration activity. Two other external loop residues, Glu 88 and Glu 89, are less important for enzyme function. The two E84D and -H variants exhibited significant activity relative to wild-type activity in pH 7.5 MOPS buffer, suggesting that the original glutamate residue could be substituted with other ionizable residues with similar pK(a) values. The E84A, -C, -K, -Q, -S, and -Y variants exhibited large decreases in k(cat) values in pH 7.5 MOPS buffer, but only exhibited small changes in k(cat)/K(m). These same six variants were all chemically rescued by pH 7.5 imidazole buffer, with 23-46-fold increases in the apparent k(cat). These results are consistent with Glu 84 functioning as a proton shuttle residue. The E62D variant exhibited a 3-fold decrease in k(cat) and a 2-fold decrease in k(cat)/K(m) relative to those of the wild type in pH 7.5 MOPS buffer, while other substitutions (E62A, -C, -H, -Q, -T, and -Y) resulted in much larger decreases in both k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m). Imidazole did not significantly increase the k(cat) values and slightly decreased the k(cat)/K(m) values of most of the Glu 62 variants. These results indicate a primary preference for a carboxylate group at position 62, and support a proposed catalytic role for residue Glu 62 in the CO(2) hydration step, but do not definitively establish its role in the proton transport step.  相似文献   

17.
X Xu  E R Kantrowitz 《Biochemistry》1991,30(31):7789-7796
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase catalyzes the hydrolysis of a wide variety of phosphomonoesters at similar rates, and the reaction proceeds through a phosphoenzyme intermediate. The active site region is highly conserved between the E. coli and mammalian alkaline phosphatases. The three-dimensional structure of the E. coli enzyme indicates that Lys-328, which is replaced by histidine in all mammalian alkaline phosphatases, is bridged to the phosphate through a water molecule. This water molecule is also hydrogen bonded to Asp-327, a bidendate ligand of the one of the two zinc atoms. Here we report the use of site-specific mutagenesis to convert Lys-328 to both histidine and alanine. Steady-state kinetic studies above pH 7.0 indicate that both mutant enzymes have altered pH versus activity profiles compared to the profile for the wild-type enzyme. At pH 10.3, in the presence of Tris, the Lys-328----Ala enzyme is approximately 14-fold more active than the wild-type enzyme. At the same pH in the absence of Tris the Lys-328----Ala enzyme is still 6-fold more active than the wild-type enzyme. Both mutant enzymes have lower phosphate affinities than the wild-type enzyme at all pH values investigated. Pre-steady-state kinetics at pH 5.5 reveal that the Lys-328----Ala enzyme behaves very similar to the phosphate-free wild-type enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Infrared spectra of heme-bound CO in sperm whale carbonmonoxy myoglobin and two mutants (H64L and H97F) were studied in the pH range from 4.2 to 9.5. Comparison of the native protein with the mutants shows that the observed pH effects can be traced to protonations of two histidine residues, H64 and H97, near the active site. Their imidazole sidechains experience simple, uncoupled Henderson-Hasselbalch type protonations, giving rise to four different protonation states. Because two of the protonation states are linked by a pH-independent equilibrium, the overall pH dependence of the spectra is described by a linear combination of three independent components. Global analysis, based on singular value decomposition and matrix least-squares algorithms enabled us to extract the pK values of the two histidines and the three basis spectra of the protonating species. The basis spectra were decomposed into the taxonomic substates A(0), A(1), and A(3), previously introduced in a heuristic way to analyze CO stretch spectra in heme proteins at fixed pH (see for instance, Biophys. J. 71:1563-1573). Moreover, an additional, weakly populated substate, called A(x), was identified. Protonation of H97 gives rise to a blue shift of the individual infrared lines by about 2 cm(-1), so that the A substates actually appear in pairs, such as A(0) and A(0)(+). The blue shift can be explained by reduced backbonding from the heme iron to the CO. Protonation of the distal histidine, H64, leads to a change of the infrared absorption from the A(1) or A(3) substate lines to A(0). This behavior can be explained by a conformational change upon protonation that moves the imidazole sidechain of H64 away from the CO into the high-dielectric solvent environment, which avoids the energetically unfavorable situation of an uncompensated electric charge in the apolar, low-dielectric protein interior. Our results suggest that protonation reactions serve as an important mechanism to create taxonomic substates in proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Tu C  Rowlett RS  Tripp BC  Ferry JG  Silverman DN 《Biochemistry》2002,41(51):15429-15435
Catalysis of the dehydration of HCO(3)(-) by carbonic anhydrase requires proton transfer from solution to the zinc-bound hydroxide. Carbonic anhydrases in each of the alpha, beta, and gamma classes, examples of convergent evolution, appear to have a side chain extending into the active site cavity that acts as a proton shuttle to facilitate this proton transfer, with His 64 being the most prominent example in the alpha class. We have investigated chemical rescue of mutants in two of these classes in which a proton shuttle has been replaced with a residue that does not transfer protons: H216N carbonic anhydrase from Arabidopsis thaliana (beta class) and E84A carbonic anhydrase from the archeon Methanosarcina thermophila (gamma class). A series of structurally homologous imidazole and pyridine buffers were used as proton acceptors in the activation of CO(2) hydration at steady state and as proton donors of the exchange of (18)O between CO(2) and water at chemical equilibrium. Free energy plots of the rate constants for this intermolecular proton transfer as a function of the difference in pK(a) of donor and acceptor showed extensive curvature, indicating a small intrinsic kinetic barrier for the proton transfers. Application of Marcus rate theory allowed quantitative estimates of the intrinsic kinetic barrier which were near 0.3 kcal/mol with work functions in the range of 7-11 kcal/mol for mutants in the beta and gamma class, similar to results obtained for mutants of carbonic anhydrase in the alpha class. The low values of the intrinsic kinetic barrier for all three classes of carbonic anhydrase reflect proton transfer processes that are consistent with a model of very rapid proton transfer through a flexible matrix of hydrogen-bonded solvent structures sequestered within the active sites of the carbonic anhydrases.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies on the interaction of carbonic anhydrase (CA) with the unique CO2 competitive inhibitor imidazole and related compounds were all interpreted as showing that an ionizable water ligand on the metal of this zinc metalloenzyme is not displaced by inhibitor binding. Internal inconsistencies in the pH dependence of binding and the pH dependence of the visible spectra of complexes with cobalt-substituted enzyme prompted us to reinvestigate this binding. Visible spectroscopy was used to measure the binding of imidazole and 1,2,4-triazole to Co(II)-substituted human CA I and active site carboxymethylated human CA I (CmCA I) and the binding of 1,2,4-triazole to bovine CoIICA II. The limiting visible spectra for these enzyme-inhibitor adducts were also computed and examined for pH dependence. It was shown that the pKa of visible spectral changes can be independently predicted from studies on the pH dependence of binding. After consideration of possible contributions from effects of His-200 ionization in CA I and CmCA I, and His-64 in CA II, the pH effects on binding affinity and spectra were found to be of the correct magnitude to establish linkage between binding and an ionization. It was also shown, however, that pH effects on binding and spectra cannot distinguish whether neutral imidazole binds to both ionization forms of the enzyme (Zn-OH2 and Zn-OH) or whether neutral imidazole and its anion both bind to only the acid form of the enzyme, presumably after displacing the water. These findings have implications to the crystallographic interpretations on the imidazole-enzyme complex and to the catalytic mechanism of CO2 hydration.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号