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1.
A spontaneous mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC6803 was isolated for its resistance to acetazolamide, an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase. The mutant showed a deficiency in oxygen exchange between CO2 and H2O, a lower level of stable internal CO2 pool and a decreased capacity to adapt its photosynthetic affinity under limited inorganic carbon regime. The initial rate of uptake of inorganic carbon was identical to that of wild-type cells. It is demonstrated that the mutation affects the carbonic anhydrase activity. This could result from either of two impairments: a deficiency in the enzyme activity detectable by mass spectrometric determinations, or a modification of the cellular compartment in which the enzyme is located, preventing its activity.  相似文献   

2.
The prokaryotic algal symbiont of ascidians, Prochloron sp., was found to exhibit carbonic anhydrase activity which is largely associated with the cell surface. This extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was inhibited, while the intracellular activity was not affected, by chloride or bromide. Acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide inhibited carbonic anhydrase activity with I50 values of 7×10-4 and 3×10-4M, respectively. These I50 values are similar to those observed for intracellular carbonic anhydrases of Synechococcus sp. PCC7942, Chlamydomonas reinhardii and spinach.Abbreviations AZA acetazolamide - CA carbonic anhydrase - chl chlorophyll - EZA ethozyzolamide - I50 concentration of an inhibitor required to cause 50% inhibition - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - U unit  相似文献   

3.
A 13-fold increase in carbonic anhydrase specific activity was found during the first 24 h in developing embryos of the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. Carbonic anhydrase activity was sensitive to inhibition by 10−4 M acetazolamide. Roles for carbonic anhydrase activity in intracellular pH regulation and spicule formation are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Acute hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction can be inhibited by high doses of the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor acetazolamide. This study aimed to determine whether acetazolamide is effective at dosing relevant to human use at high altitude and to investigate whether its efficacy against hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction is dependent on carbonic anhydrase inhibition by testing other potent heterocyclic sulfonamide carbonic anhydrase inhibitors. Six conscious dogs were studied in five protocols: 1) controls, 2) low-dose intravenous acetazolamide (2 mg.kg(-1).h(-1)), 3) oral acetazolamide (5 mg/kg), 4) benzolamide, a membrane-impermeant inhibitor, and 5) ethoxzolamide, a membrane-permeant inhibitor. In all protocols, unanesthetized dogs breathed spontaneously during the first hour (normoxia) and then breathed 9-10% O(2) for the next 2 h. Arterial oxygen tension ranged between 35 and 39 mmHg during hypoxia in all protocols. In controls, mean pulmonary artery pressure increased by 8 mmHg and pulmonary vascular resistance by 200 dyn.s.cm(-5) (P <0.05). With intravenous acetazolamide, mean pulmonary artery pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance remained unchanged during hypoxia. With oral acetazolamide, mean pulmonary artery pressure increased by 5 mmHg (P < 0.05), but pulmonary vascular resistance did not change during hypoxia. With benzolamide and ethoxzolamide, mean pulmonary artery pressure increased by 6-7 mmHg and pulmonary vascular resistance by 150-200 dyn.s.cm(-5) during hypoxia (P < 0.05). Low-dose acetazolamide is effective against acute hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction in vivo. The lack of effect with two other potent carbonic anhydrase inhibitors suggests that carbonic anhydrase is not involved in the mediation of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and that acetazolamide acts on a different receptor or channel.  相似文献   

5.
Investigations using steady-state culture conditions indicate that carbonic anhydrase activity is correlated to the photosynthetic rate in Euglena in some but not all circumstances. When cultures grown with 5% CO2 were changed to air growth, the photosynthetic rate was independent of the carbonic anhydrase activity. While experiments using the inhibitor acetazolamide indicated a close correlation between photosynthetic capacity and carbonic anhydrase activity, the inhibitor was found to be nonspecific. Acetazolamide altered photosystem activities directly as measured by the photoreduction of DCPIP in chloroplast preparations, whole-cell fluorescence transients of chlorophyll a, and by whole chain photoelectron flow. Ethoxzolamide, another inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase, was also found to inhibit photosystem activities, i.e., the photoreduction of DCPIP, and in vivo photoelectron flow, at high concentrations. Cells grown in 5% CO2 were less sensitive to the effects of acetazolamide than cells exposed to air. The rate of electron flow in chloroplasts from cells grown with 5% CO2 and exposed to 10 mM acetazolamide was 2.5-fold faster than that of chloroplasts from air-grown cells exposed to the same concentration of inhibitor. The whole cell chlorophyll a fluorescence transients of cultures grown with high CO2 were completely different from those of air-grown cells and also showed fewer effects on exposure to acetazolamide. These results suggest a reevaluation of the hypothesis that carbonic anhydrase activity regulates photosynthesis. It is also apparent that results from air-grown and 5% CO2-grown cultures cannot be directly compared in such studies.  相似文献   

6.
The activity and subcellular distribution of carbonic anhydrase in a coccolithophorid alga, CCMP 299, was examined. The enzyme could not be detected in crude cell homogenates but was present at high specific activity (27.5 unit·mg?1 protein) in chloroplasts (density, 1.14 g·cm?3) isolated in a sucrose gradient. The carbonic anhydrase activity was sensitive to known inhibitors. Inhibition at 50% (I50) was obtained with concentrations of 4.60 mM and 2.65 mM for acetazolamide and NaN3, respectively. These levels are more consistent with patterns of inhibition previously observed for chloroplastic (as compared to periplasmic) carbonic anhydrase. In this organism, carbonic anhydrase was localized in the chloroplast stroma. These findings are discussed in terms of the relationship among dissolved inorganic carbon interconversions, photosynthesis, and calcification.  相似文献   

7.
Supernatant obtained after high-speed centrifugation of disrupted thylakoids that had been washed free from extrathylakoid carbonic anhydrases demonstrated carbonic anhydrase activity that was inhibited by the specific inhibitors acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide. A distinctive feature of the effect of Triton X-100 on this activity also suggested that the source of the activity is a soluble protein. Native electrophoresis of a preparation obtained using chromatography with agarose/mafenide as an affinity sorbent revealed one protein band with carbonic anhydrase activity. The same protein was revealed in a mutant deficient in soluble stromal carbonic anhydrase β-CA1, and this indicated that the newly revealed carbonic anhydrase is not a product of the At3g01500 gene. These data imply the presence of soluble carbonic anhydrase in the thylakoid lumen of higher plants.  相似文献   

8.
Sulfonamide drugs mediate their main therapeutic effects through modulation of the activity of membrane and cytosolic carbonic anhydrases. How interactions of sulfonamide drugs impact structural properties and activity of carbonic anhydrases requires further study. Here the effect of acetazolamide on the structure and function of bovine carbonic anhydrase II (cytosolic form of the enzyme) was evaluated. The Far-UV CD studies indicated that carbonic anhydrase, for the most part, retains its secondary structure in the presence of acetazolamide. Fluorescence measurements using iodide ions and ANS, along with ASA calculations, revealed that in the presence of acetazolamide minimal conformational changes occurred in the carbonic anhydrase structure. These structural changes, which may involve spatial reorientation of Trp 4 and Trp 190 or some other related aminoacyl residues near the active site, considerably reduced the catalytic activity of the enzyme while its thermal stability was slightly increased. Our binding results indicated that binding of acetazolamide to the protein could occur with a 1:1 ratio, one mole of acetazolamide per one mole of the protein. However, the obtained kinetic results supported the existence of two acetazolamide binding sites on the protein structure. The occupation of each of these binding sites by acetazolamide completely inactivates the enzyme. Advanced analysis of the kinetic results revealed that there are two substrate (p-NPA) binding sites whose simultaneous occupation is required for full enzyme activity. Thus, these studies suggest that the two isoforms of CA II should exist in the medium, each of which contains one substrate binding site (catalytic site) and one acetazolamide binding site. The acetazolamide binding site is equivalent to the catalytic site, thus, inhibiting enzyme activity by a competitive mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
Inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase were tested for their effects on Photosystem II (PS II) activity in chloroplasts. We find that formate inhibition of PS II turnover rates increases as the pH of the reaction medium is lowered. Bicarbonate ions can inhibit PS II turnover rates. The relative potency of the anionic inhibitors N3?, I?, OAc?, and Cl? is the same for both carbonic anhydrase and PS II. The inhibitory effect of acetazolamide on PS II increases as light intensity decreases, indicating a lowering of quantum yields in the presence of the inhibitor. Imidazole inhibition of PS II increases with pH in a manner suggesting that the unprotonated form of the compound is inhibitory. Formate, bicarbonate, acetazolamide, and imidazole all inhibit DCMU-insensitive, silicomolybdate-supported oxygen evolution, indicating that the site(s) of action of the inhibitors is at, or before, the primary stable PS II electron acceptor Q. This inhibitory effect of low levels of HCO3? along with the known enhancement by HCO3? of quinone-mediated electron flow suggests an antagonistic control effect on PS II photochemistry. We conclude that the responses of PS II to anions (formate, bicarbonate), acetazolamide, and imidazole are analogous to the responses shown by carbonic anhydrase. These findings suggest that the enzyme carbonic anhydrase may provide a model system to gain insight into the “bicarbonate-effect” associated with PS II in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

10.
Localization of carbonic anhydrase in the rat lung   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Summary The localization of carbonic anhydrase in the rat lung has been demonstrated, at light and electron microscopic levels, by the cobalt bicarbonate histochemical method of Hansson. Focal deposits of the cobalt sulfide reaction product were found not only in the capillary endothelium of the alveolar walls, but also in the small and large alveolar cells. The histochemical reaction was abolished by two potent inhibitors, acetazolamide (10–5 to 10–6 M) and KCNO (5×10–3 to 10×10–3 M). Physiological assay with Maren's method indicated that values for carbonic anhydrase activity in rat lung are 4.4±0.8 UA/mg of protein, 25.0±5.5 UA/mg of nitrogen, and 369±86 UA/g of wet weight. In addition, it was calculated that after fixation in glutaraldehyde-formaldehyde-picric acid about 9% activity is retained.  相似文献   

11.
By measuring 18O exchange from doubly labeled CO2 (13C18O18O), intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was studied with protoplasts and chloroplasts isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown either on air (low inorganic carbon [Ci]) or air enriched with 5% CO2 (high Ci). Intact low Ci protoplasts had a 10-fold higher carbonic anhydrase activity than did high Ci protoplasts. Application of dextran-bound inhibitor and quaternary ammonium sulfanilamide, both known as membrane impermeable inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase, had no influence on the catalysis of 18O exchange, indicating that cross-contamination with extracellular carbonic anhydrase was not responsible for the observed activity. This intracellular in vivo activity from protoplasts was inhibited by acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide. Intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was partly associated with intact chloroplasts isolated from high and low Ci cells, and the latter had a sixfold greater rate of catalysis. The presence of dextran-bound inhibitor had no effect on chloroplast-associated carbonic anhydrase, whereas 150 micromolar ethoxyzolamide caused a 61 to 67% inhibition of activity. These results indicate that chloroplastic carbonic anhydrase was located within the plastid and that it was relatively insensitive to ethoxyzolamide. Carbonic anhydrase activity in crude homogenates of protoplasts and chloroplasts was about six times higher in the low Ci than in high Ci preparations. Further separation into soluble and insoluble fractions together with inhibitor studies revealed that there are at least two different forms of intracellular carbonic anhydrase. One enzyme, which was rather insoluble and relatively insensitive to ethoxyzolamide, is likely an intrachloroplastic carbonic anhydrase. The second carbonic anhydrase, which was soluble and sensitive to ethoxyzolamide, is most probably located in an extrachloroplastic compartment.  相似文献   

12.
In a preparation of isolated gills of the shore crabCarcinus mediterraneus perfused with dilute sea water (pH 8.1, 200 mM Na+) which was identical to the bathing solution of the gill, acidification of the collected perfusate was observed. Acidification was not affected by 10−4 M EIPA (5-[N-ethyl-N-isopropyl]amiloride), a strong inhibitor of Na+/H+ exchange. However, in the presence of 10−4 M acetazolamide, acidification was greatly blocked. The significant decrease of the acid load of the perfusate is considered to be a result of inhibition of the branchial intracellular carbonic anhydrase catalyzing the formation of H+ ions.  相似文献   

13.
An α-carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) was purified and characterized kinetically from gill of Acipenser gueldenstaedtii as an endangered sturgeon species. The carbonic anhydrase was purified 66-folds with yield 20.7% by Sepharose-4B-l-tyrosine-sulfanilamide affinity column and the specific activity was determined as 222.2?EU/mg protein. Km and Vmax kinetic values for gill carbonic anhydrase were calculated by a Lineweaver–Burk graph using p-nitrophenol acetate (p-NPA) as a substrate, and was defined as 2.5?mM and 5?×?106?μM/min, respectively. It was observed that CA from the sturgeon gill in the presence of the sulfanilamide and acetazolamide as an inhibitor had very low IC50 values such as 13.0 and 0.1?μM, respectively. In addition, it was determined that the enzyme was inhibited by Fe2+, Co2+, Ni2+, and Zn2+–Ba2+ with the IC50 values of 0.2, 1.7, 1.2, and 1.1?mM, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
Membrane-permeable and impermeable inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase have been used to assess the roles of extracellular and intracellular carbonic anhydrase on the inorganic carbon concentrating system in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Acetazolamide, ethoxzolamide, and a membrane-impermeable, dextran-bound sulfonamide were potent inhibitors of extracellular carbonic anhydrase measured with intact cells. At pH 5.1, where CO2 is the predominant species of inorganic carbon, both acetazolamide and the dextran-bound sulfonamide had no effect on the concentration of CO2 required for the half-maximal rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution (K0.5[CO2]) or inorganic carbon accumulation. However, a more permeable inhibitor, ethoxzolamide, inhibited CO2 fixation but increased the accumulation of inorganic carbon as compared with untreated cells. At pH 8, the K0.5(CO2) was increased from 0.6 micromolar to about 2 to 3 micromolar with both acetazolamide and the dextran-bound sulfonamide, but to a higher value of 60 micromolar with ethoxzolamide. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that CO2 is the species of inorganic carbon which crosses the plasmalemma and that extracellular carbonic anhydrase is required to replenish CO2 from HCO3 at high pH. These data also implicate a role for intracellular carbonic anhydrase in the inorganic carbon accumulating system, and indicate that both acetazolamide and the dextran-bound sulfonamide inhibit only the extracellular enzyme. It is suggested that HCO3 transport for internal accumulation might occur at the level of the chloroplast envelope.  相似文献   

15.
Acid-base equilibria/disequilibria were evaluated in vivo in post-branchial arterial blood and pre-branchial venous blood of freshwater rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). This was accomplished using arterial and venous extracorporeal circuits in conjunction with a stopped-flow apparatus. After the abrupt stoppage of circulating post-branchial blood within the stopped-flow apparatus, pH increased slowly ([Delta]pH = +0.032 ± 0.004 pH units; n = 15), thus confirming the existence of an acid-base disequilibrium state in the arterial blood of rainbow trout. The slow downstream pH changes were unaffected by prior treatment of fish with the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor benzolamide (1.2 mg kg-1; [Delta]pH = +0.032 ± 0.01 pH units; n = 5) but were eliminated after intra-vascular injection of 10 mg kg-1 bovine carbonic anhydrase ([Delta]pH = -0.011 ± 0.003 pH units; n = 8). These results demonstrate that the acid-base disequilibrium in the arterial blood reflects a total absence of extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity. Similar stopped-flow experiments revealed the existence of a reduced, yet significant, acid-base disequilibrium in the venous blood circulating within the caudal vein ([Delta]pH = +0.004 ± 0.003 pH units; n = 15). Selective inhibition of extracellular carbonic anhydrase using benzolamide did not significantly influence the magnitude of the venous pH disequilibrium ([Delta]pH = +0.007 ± 0.007 pH units; n = 8) whereas intra-vascular injection of carbonic anhydrase eliminated the pH disequilibrium. These results demonstrate that extracellular carbonic anhydrase, although reported to be present within the skeletal muscle of rainbow trout, does not accelerate post-capillary pH changes in the venous circulation.  相似文献   

16.
The electrogenic Na+-HCO3? cotransporter NBCe1 plays essential roles in the regulation of systemic and/or local pH. Homozygous inactivating mutations in NBCe1 cause proximal renal tubular acidosis associated with ocular abnormalities. We recently showed that defective membrane expression of NBCe1, caused by several mutations such as Delta65bp (S982NfsX4), is also associated with familial migraine. The Delta65bp mutant is quite unique in that it lacks a putative carbonic anhydrase (CA) II-binding domain but still shows an apparently normal transport activity in Xenopus oocytes. In this addendum, we show that the co-expression of CAII together with the wild-type NBCe1 or the Delta65bp mutant does not enhance the NBCe1 activities in oocytes. Moreover, a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor acetazolamide fails to inhibit the wild-type or the Delta65bp activities co-expressed with CAII. These results indicate that a bicarbonate transport metabolon proposed for the interaction between CAII and NBCe1 does not work at least in Xenopus oocytes.  相似文献   

17.
Two herbicide-resistant strains of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 are compared to the wild-type with respect to the DNA changes which result in herbicide resstance. The mutations have previously been mapped to a region of the cyanobacterial genome which encodes oneof three copies of psbA, the gene which encodes the 32 kDa Qb-binding protein also known as D1 (Buzby et al. 1987). The DNA sequence of the wild-type gene was first determined and used as a comparison to that of the mutant alleles. A point mutation at codon 211 in the psbA1 coding locus (TTC) to TCC) results in an amino acid change from phenylalanine to serine in the D1 protein. This mutation confers resistance to atrazine and diuron at seven times and at two times the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) for the wild-type, respectively. A mutation at codon 211 resulting in herbicide resistance has not previously been described in the literature. A second point mutation at codon 219 in the psbA1 coding locus (GTA to ATA) results in an amino acid change from valine to isoleucine in the D1 protein. This mutation confers resistance to diuron and atrazine at ten times and at two times the MIC for the wild-type, respectively. An identical codon change conferring similar herbicide resistance patterns has previously been described in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The atrazine-resistance phenotype in Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 was shown to be dominant by plasmid segregation analysis.Abbreviations At r atrazine resistance - Du r diuron resistance - Km r kanamycin resistance - Ap r ampicillin resistance - MIC Minimum inhibitory concentration  相似文献   

18.
It is known, that the multi-subunit complex of photosystem II (PSII) and some of its single proteins exhibit carbonic anhydrase activity. Previously, we have shown that PSII depletion of HCO3?/CO2 as well as the suppression of carbonic anhydrase activity of PSII by a known inhibitor of α?carbonic anhydrases, acetazolamide (AZM), was accompanied by a decrease of electron transport rate on the PSII donor side. It was concluded that carbonic anhydrase activity was required for maximum photosynthetic activity of PSII but it was not excluded that AZM may have two independent mechanisms of action on PSII: specific and nonspecific. To investigate directly the specific influence of carbonic anhydrase inhibition on the photosynthetic activity in PSII we used another known inhibitor of α?carbonic anhydrase, trifluoromethanesulfonamide (TFMSA), which molecular structure and physicochemical properties are quite different from those of AZM. In this work, we show for the first time that TFMSA inhibits PSII carbonic anhydrase activity and decreases rates of both the photo-induced changes of chlorophyll fluorescence yield and the photosynthetic oxygen evolution. The inhibitory effect of TFMSA on PSII photosynthetic activity was revealed only in the medium depleted of HCO3?/CO2. Addition of exogenous HCO3? or PSII electron donors led to disappearance of the TFMSA inhibitory effect on the electron transport in PSII, indicating that TFMSA inhibition site was located on the PSII donor side. These results show the specificity of TFMSA action on carbonic anhydrase and photosynthetic activities of PSII. In this work, we discuss the necessity of carbonic anhydrase activity for the maximum effectiveness of electron transport on the donor side of PSII.  相似文献   

19.
Basic muscle protein,a third genetic locus isoenzyme of carbonic anhydrase?   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Rabbit muscle cytosol extract contains a basic protein which represents about 2% of the total cytosol protein. It contains zinc in a 1:1 stoichiometric ratio, based on a molecular weight of 30,000, and it catalyzes the hydration of CO2. It is immunochemically distinct from the high and low activity forms of rabbit blood carbonic anhydrase. It has comparatively poor activity as an esterase, and about 20% of the CO2 hydratase activity of the rabbit blood low activity carbonic anhydrase. This CO2 hydratase activity is not inhibited by acetazolamide at concentrations which totally inhibit the activity of the blood carbonic anhydrases. The evidence obtained to date, though circumstantial, suggests that this basic metalloprotein is a carbonic anhydrase derived from a third genetic locus with properties considerably different from those of the mammalian carbonic anhydrases heretofore identified.  相似文献   

20.
A novel organ culture system has been developed to study the regulation of statoconia production in the gravity sensing organ in Aplysia californica. Statocysts were cultured in Leibovitz (L15) medium supplemented with salts and Aplysia haemolymph for four days at 17°C. The viability of the system was evaluated by examining four parameters: statocyst morphology, the activity of the mechanosensory cilia in the statocyst, production of new statoconia during culture and change in statoconia volume after culture. There were no morphological differences in statocysts before and after culture when ciliary beating was maintained. There was a 29% increase in the number of statoconia after four days in culture. Mean statocyst, statolith and statoconia volumes were not affected by culture conditions. The presence of carbonic anhydrase in the statocysts was shown using immunohistochemistry. When statocysts were cultured in the presence of 4.0 × 10–4 M acetazolamide to inhibit the enzyme activity, there was a decrease in statoconia production and statoconia volume, indicating a role for this enzyme in statoconia homeostasis, potentially via pH regulation. These studies are the first to report a novel system for the culture of statocysts and show that carbonic anhydrase is involved in the regulation of statoconia volume and production.  相似文献   

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