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 156 毫秒
1.
The electrophoretic phenotypes of the two isozymes of red cell carbonic anhydrase, CA I and CA II, are described in nine species of macaque monkeys from southeast Asia and Japan. Twelve phenotypes of CA I, apparently under the control of seven alleles, and five phenotypes of CA II, under the control of three alleles, were found in the different macaque populations studied. Extensive electrophoretic polymorphisms of CA I were found in three species (Macaca nemestrina, Macaca speciosa, and Macaca fuscata), and polymorphisms at the CA II locus were found in Macaca irus, Macaca mulatta, and M. nemestrina. In addition to the electrophoretic polymorphisms at the CA I locus in M. nemestrina, an inherited deficiency of CA I was also discovered in which approximately 30% of the individuals in all populations of M. nemestrina tested showed the deficient phenotype. Although the recessive gene controlling this deficiency appears to be an allele of the CA I locus, it is postulated that the CA I deficiency could also be under the control of a closely linked gene. The comparative data on the extent of genetic variation observed in the two isozymes of red cell carbonic anhydrase in macaques appear to support the concept that CA I has evolved more rapidly than CA II in mammals.Supported by USPHS grant GM-15419 and NSF grants GF-253, GB-7426, and GB-15060 of the U.S.-Japan Cooperative Science and Systemic Biology Programs.  相似文献   

2.
Two isozymes of carbonic anhydrase (CA I and CA II) were quantified by a radio-immunoassay in 10 different tissues of the pig-tailed macaque. There were clearly differences in relative amounts of the two isozymes, indicating a differential regulation of these two different gene products. An inherited deficiency variant reduced red cell CA I and CA II 5000-fold and 2.7-fold, respectively. In nine other tissues, CA I was reduced from approximately twofold to 110-fold, and CA II was essentially unchanged. The CA I in deficient red cells was immunochemically and electrophoretically identical to common electrophoretic variants of CA I in the pig-tailed macaque and was enzymatically active.This work was part of a doctoral dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the Doctor of Philosophy degree in the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies at The University of Michigan. Supported by NIH training grant 5-T01-GM-71-11 and NIH research grant GM-15419.  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 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   

5.
Dendritic cell (DC)-based immunotherapy is a potent therapeutic modality for treating renal cell carcinoma (RCC), but development of antigens specific for tumor-targeting and anti-tumor immunity is of great interest for clinical trials. The present study investigated the ability of DCs pulsed with a combination of carbonic anhydrase IX (CA9) as an RCC-specific biomarker and Acinetobacter baumannii outer membrane protein A (AbOmpA) as an immunoadjuvant to induce anti-tumor immunity against murine renal cell carcinoma (RENCA) in a murine model. Murine bone-marrow-derived DCs pulsed with a combination of RENCA lysates and AbOmpA were tested for their capacity to induce DC maturation and T cell responses in vitro. A combination of RENCA lysates and AbOmpA up-regulated the surface expression of co-stimulatory molecules, CD80 and CD86, and the antigen presenting molecules, major histocompatibility (MHC) class I and class II, in DCs. A combination of RENCA lysates and AbOmpA also induced interleukin-12 (IL-12) production in DCs. Next, the immunostimulatory activity of DCs pulsed with a combination of CA9 and AbOmpA was determined. A combination of CA9 and AbOmpA up-regulated the surface expression of co-stimulatory molecules and antigen presenting molecules in DCs. DCs pulsed with a combination of CA9 and AbOmpA effectively secreted IL-12 but not IL-10. These cells interacted with T cells and formed clusters. DCs pulsed with CA9 and AbOmpA elicited the secretion of interferon-γ and IL-2 in T cells. In conclusion, a combination of CA9 and AbOmpA enhanced the immunostimulatory activity of DCs, which may effectively induce anti-tumor immunity against human RCC.  相似文献   

6.
Studies were undertaken on the heat denaturation and proteolytic degradation by alpha-chymotrypsin of the normal red cell carbonic anhydrase isozyme, CA II, and two electrophoretic variants of carbonic anhydrase I, CA Ia and CA Ib, of the pigtail macaque. The heat degradation results showed a difference of about 40-fold in the rate constants between CA Ia and CA Ib, which is due to the marked thermostability of CA Ib compared to CA Ia. The enthalpies and entropies of activation were calculated from the heat denaturation constants. These values were compared, on enthalpy-entropy compensation plots, with those values previously determined for the human CA I and CA II isozymes. They were highly correlated and clearly fell into two distinct clusters, separated by about 200 kJ mol-1; one group comprising the macaque and human CA I isozymes and the other the CA II isozymes. The proteolytic degradation results showed that CA Ia is degraded about 2.5 times more rapidly than CA Ib by alpha-chymotrypsin. Thus, the characteristic 3/1 ratio of CA Ib/CA Ia in mature red cells could be accounted for by the greater susceptibility of CA Ia to degradation at some stage in red cell development.  相似文献   

7.
Schiff's bases were obtained from aromatic/heterocyclic sulfonamides and amino-sulfonamide derivatives, such as sulfanilamide, homosulfanilamide, 4-aminoethyl-benzenesulfonamide and 5-amino-1,3,4-thiadiazole-2-sulfonamide. Metal complexes of some of these Schiff's bases, incorporating Zn(II), Co(lI), Ni(II) and Cu(II) ions, were also prepared and tested as inhibitors of the zinc enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA), and more specifically the red blood cell isozymes I and II. The Schiff's bases behaved as medium potency CA I and CA II inhibitors, whereas their metal complexes showed a highly enhanced potency, with several low nanomolar CA II inhibitors detected.  相似文献   

8.
Schiff's bases were obtained from aromatic/heterocyclic sulfonamides and amino-sulfonamide derivatives, such as sulfanilamide, homosulfanilamide, 4-aminoethyl-benzenesulfonamide and 5-amino-1,3,4-thiadiazole-2-sulfonamide. Metal complexes of some of these Schiff's bases, incorporating Zn(II), Co(II), Ni(II) and Cu(II) ions, were also prepared and tested as inhibitors of the zinc enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA), and more specifically the red blood cell isozymes I and II. The Schiff's bases behaved as medium potency CA I and CA II inhibitors, whereas their metal complexes showed a highly enhanced potency, with several low nanomolar CA II inhibitors detected.  相似文献   

9.
In order to bolster the argument that parallel developmental changes in erythrocyte adult hemoglobin (HbA) and carbonic anhydrase (CA) content provide a potentially suitable model for the dissection of coordinate gene expression, the magnitude of fetal vs adult differences in CA I and CA II levels was examined in human red cell subpopulations obtained after varying periods of exposure to CA-dependent, NH4Cl-HCO-3-mediated, acetazolamide-modulated hemolysis. When content of CA I and CA II was immunologically assessed in cohorts surviving successively longer periods of hemolysis, cord blood red cells were divisible into two populations. Fifteen to thirty percent are rapidly disrupted and have CA I and CA II concentrations similar to those in adult blood erythrocytes. The remaining 70 to 85% have CA I concentrations which are 100-fold less and CA II concentrations which are 5- to 20-fold less than those found in adults. Thus, contrary to past reports, the magnitude of the developmental change in CA I concentration closely resembles the magnitude of change in HbA levels.  相似文献   

10.
The levels of the carbonic anhydrase isozymes (CA and CA II) in single erythrocytes of DBA/2J mice were assayed by measuring the specific immunofluorescence of CA I and CA II with a microspectrofluorometric technique. Measurements of 100 randomly selected cells showed a range (in relative fluorescence units) of 21-52 (mean 31.3 +/- 7.5) for CA I and 30-80 (mean 45.6 +/- 10.7) for CA II. The CA II/CA I ratio of the means obtained by the single-cell fluorescence assay was similar to the ratios obtained for the two isozymes from hemolysates of DBA/2J mice using an immunodiffusion assay. The influence of cell age on the variation in carbonic anhydrase levels was determined by separating red cells into several fractions by a gravity sedimentation procedure. The younger cells showed higher levels of CA I and CA II than the older cells; however, the extensive overlap in the variability between the cells from the different fractions indicated that although cell age was contributing to the overall heterogeneity, its influence was not pronounced.  相似文献   

11.
A series of aromatic sulfonamides incorporating indane moieties were prepared starting from commercially available 1- and 2-indanamine, and their activity as inhibitors of two carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) isozymes, hCA I and II was studied. The new sulfonamides incorporating acetamido, 4-chloro-benzoyl, valproyl, tetra-, and pentafluorobenzoyl moieties acted as very potent inhibitors of the slow red blood cell isozyme hCA I (K(i)s in the range of 1.6-8.5 nM), which usually has a lower affinity for such inhibitors, as compared to isozyme II. Some derivatives also showed excellent hCA II inhibitory properties (K(i)s in the range of 2.3-12 nM), but the anticonvulsant activity of these sulfonamides was rather low as compared to that of other sulfonamide/sulfamate CA inhibitors, such as methazolamide. Furthermore, the 2-amino/acetamido-indane-5-sulfonic acids prepared during this work also showed interesting CA inhibitory properties, with inhibition constants in the range of 43-89 nM against the two isozymes, being among the most potent sulfonic acid CA inhibitors reported so far.  相似文献   

12.
This study investigates the evolutionary history of vertebrate red blood cell carbonic anhydrase (CA) by characterizing the isozyme properties and nucleotide sequence of an ancient fish, the longnose gar ( Lepisosteus osseus). The inhibitor sensitivities of gar rbc CA closely resembled those for mammalian CA II, as well as those for CAs from more recently evolved fishes. The kinetic properties of gar rbc CA were not closely aligned with either mammalian CA I and CA II, but fit well into an emerging phylogenetic pattern for early vertebrates. Gar rbc CA cDNA was also amplified from mRNA using 5' and 3'-RACE and the open reading frame consisted of 786 bp. This sequence shares approximately 65% identity with the nucleotide and amino acid sequences of both mammalian CA I and CA II. When the amino acid sequences within the active site are compared, gar rbc CA differs from mammalian CA I, CA II and CA VII by 9, 4 and 3 of the 36 amino acids, respectively. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that gar rbc CA diverged before the amniotic CAs (CA I, CA II and CA III), but after CA V and CA VII.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Calcium, carbonic anhydrase and gastric acid secretion   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Previous data concerning the action of calcium (Ca) on gastric acid secretion (GAS) indicated that calcium ions increase GAS elicited by gastrin released through a vagal mechanism, and also by a direct effect on parietal cells. Our research showed that the stimulating effect of calcium on gastric acid secretion can be antagonized by verapamil administration, which reduces gastric acid secretion . In the present study we followed the effect induced by administration of calcium and Ca-chelating agents (disodium EDTA) on gastric acid secretion and on carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity. We selected two groups of healthy volunteers: Group I (n=21) received a single i.v. dose of CaCl2 (15 mg/kg b.w.), whereas Group II (n=22) received a single i.v. dose of disodium EDTA (5 mg/kg b.w.). We determined blood calcium before and after treatment, gastric acid secretion at 2 hours. erythrocyte CA II activity, and CA IV activity in membrane parietal cells, which were isolated from gastric mucosa obtained by endoscopic biopsy. Assessment of carbonic anhydrase activity was achieved by the stopped-flow method. In Group I calcium administration increased blood calcium, HCl output, CA II and CA IV activity as compared to initial values. In Group II, disodium EDTA reduced blood calcium, HCl output, CA II and CA IV activity as compared to initial values. The results demonstrated that increased blood calcium and GAS values after calcium administration correlated with the increase of erythrocyte CA II and parietal cell CA IV activity, while disodium EDTA induced a reversed process. Our results also show that cytosolic CA II and membrane CA IV values are sensitive to calcium changes and they directly depend on these levels. Our data suggest that intra- and extracellular pH changes induced by carbonic anhydrase might account for the modulation of the physiological and pathological secretory processes in the organism.  相似文献   

15.
Based on the X-ray crystallographic structure of the adduct of human carbonic anhydrase II (hCA II) with the weak activator histamine (Briganti, F., Mangani, S., Orioli, P., Scozzafava, A., Vernaglione, G. and Supuran, C.T. (1997) Biochemistry, 36, 10,384-10,392), a novel class of tight-binding CA activators was designed by using histamine (Hst) as lead molecule. Thus, N-1-tritylsulfenyl Hst was synthesized by reaction of Hst with tetrabromophthalic anhydride followed by protection of its imidazole moiety with tritylsulfenyl chloride. After hydrazinolysis, it afforded a key intermediate which was derivatized at the aliphatic amino group. Reaction of the key intermediate with 4-fluorophenylsulfonylureido amino acids (fpu-AA) or 2-toluenesulfonylureido amino acids (ots-AA) in the presence of carbodiimides, afforded after deprotection, a series of compounds with the general formula fpu/ots-AA-Hst (fpu = 4-FC6H4SO2NHCO; ots = 2-MeC6H4SO2NHCO). Some structurally related dipeptides with the general formula fpu/ots-AA1-AA2-Hst (AA, AA1 and AA2 represent amino acyl moieties), were also prepared, by a strategy similar to that used for the simple amino acyl compounds above. The new derivatives proved to be efficient in vitro activators of three CA isozymes. Best activity was shown against hCA I and bCA IV, for which some of the new compounds (such as the Lys, Arg, His or the dipeptide derivatives) showed affinities in the 2-12 nm range (h = human; b = bovine isozymes). hCA II was on the other hand somehow less prone to activation by the new derivatives, which possessed affinities around 30-60 nM for this isozyme. Ex vivo experiments showed some of the new activators to strongly enhance red cell CA activity (180-230%) after incubation with human erythrocytes. This new class of CA activators might lead to the development of drugs/diagnostic tools for the CA deficiency syndrome, a genetic disease of bone, brain and kidneys.  相似文献   

16.
The purification of red blood cell carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) from ostrich (scCA) blood is reported, as well as an inhibition study of this enzyme with a series of aromatic and heterocylic sulfonamides. The ostrich enzyme showed a high activity, comparable to that of the human isozyme II, with kcat, of 1.2 x 10(6) s(-1) and kcat/KM of 1.8 x 10(7) M(-1)s(-1), and an inhibition profile quite different from that of the human red blood cell cytosolic isozymes hCA I and II. scCA has generally a lower affinity for sulfonamide inhibitors as compared to hCA I and II. The only sulfonamide which behaved as a very potent inhibitor of this enzyme was ethoxzolamide (KI = 3.9 nM) whereas acetazolamide and sulfanilamide behaved as weaker inhibitors (inhibition constants in the range 303-570 nM). Several other aromatic and heterocyclic sulfonamides, mostly derivatives of sulfanilamide, homosulfanilamide, 4-aminoethylbenzenesulfonamide or 5-amino-1,3,4-thiadiazole-2-sulfonamide, showed good affinities for the ostrich enzyme, with KI values in the range 25-72 nM.  相似文献   

17.
The inheritance of red blood cell levels of carbonic anhydrase isozymes (CA I and CA II) has been studied in different carbonic anhydrase I genotypes of the pig-tailed macaque, Macaca nemestrina. Quantitation of CA I isozymes in a series of animals indicates that the total CA I concentration is the sum of the average effects of each CA I structural allele and that the average effects are independent of the various allelic combinations. The relative average effects were 0.32:0.95:1.0 for the CA I a, CA Ib, and CA I c structural genes, respectively. It is also demonstrated that the level of CA II is related to the CA I genotypes. Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that each dose of CA I-deficiency gene present decreased the CA II concentration by approximately 30%, with this decrease in CA II level being solely related to the dose of CA I-deficiency gene and not to the level of CA I. The CA I-deficient animals produce CA I products that are similar to the common CA Ia, CA Ib, CA Ic electrophoretic types. Limited mating data indicate that the CA I components in CA I-deficient animals are inherited codominantly.Supported by U.S. Public Health Service Research Grant GM-15419.This report is a portion of a dissertation submitted to the University of Michigan in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy degree.U.S. Public Health Service Predoctoral Trainee (GM-71-14).  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

Reaction of twenty aromatic/heterocyclic sulfonamides containing a free amino, imino, hydra-zino or hydroxyl group, with tosyl isocyanate or 3,4-dichlorophenyl isocyanate afforded two series of derivatives containing arylsulfonylureido or diarylureido moieties in their molecule respectively. The new derivatives were assayed as inhibitors of three carbonic anhydrase (CA) isozymes, CA I, II (cytosolic forms) and IV (membrane-bound form). Potent inhibition was observed against all three isozymes but especially against CA I, which is generally 10-75 times less susceptible to inhibition by the classical sulfonamides in clinical use as compared to the other major red cell isozyme, CA II, or the membrane-bound one, CA IV. The derivatives obtained from tosyl isocyanate were generally more potent than the corresponding ones obtained from 3,4-dichlorophenyl isocyanate. This is the first reported example of selective inhibition of CA I and might lead to more selective drugs/diagnostic agents from this class of pharmacologically relevant compounds.  相似文献   

19.
Carbonic anhydrase II (CA II), which has the highest turnover number and widest tissue distribution of any of the seven CA isozymes known in humans, is absent from the red blood cells and probably from other tissues of patients with CA II deficiency syndrome. We have sequenced the CA II gene in a patient from a consanguinous marriage in a Belgian family and identified the mutation that is probably the cause of the CA II deficiency in that family. The change is a C-to-T transition which results in the substitution of Tyr (TAT) for His (CAT) at position 107. This histidine is invariant in all amniotic CA isozymes sequenced to date, as well as the CAs from elasmobranch and algal sources and in a viral CA-related protein. His-107 appears to have a stabilizing function in the structure of all CA molecules, and its substitution by Tyr apparently disrupts the critical hydrogen bonding of His-107 to two other similarly invariant residues, Glu-117 and Tyr-194, resulting in an unstable CA II molecule. We have also completed the intron-exon structure of the normal human CA II gene, which has allowed us to prepare PCR primers for all exons. These primers will facilitate the determination of the mutations in other inherited CA II deficiencies.  相似文献   

20.
Chromatographic separation of the non-heme proteins from the erythrocytes of the subterranean mole rat belonging to the superspecies Spalax ehrenbergi from Israel revealed two major peaks. On sequence analyses, the larger peak corresponded to a 56 kDa selenium-binding protein (SeBP) previously characterized from mouse and human liver, and the second peak to the low-activity carbonic anhydrase (CA) isozyme, CA I. There was no evidence of the high-activity CA II isozyme normally found in the red cells of all amniotes tested to date. Thus, the mole rat appears to be the first mammalian species to express both a SeBP and the low-activity CA I isozyme, as the major non-heme proteins in its red blood cells. It is possible that the absence of the high-activity CA II isozyme may be advantageous to the mole rat in adapting to the low O2 and high CO2 environment of its underground burrows. It is also likely that the 56 kDa SeBP may play an important adaptive role in the physiology of the red cell.  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