Literature DB >> 10550681

Carbonic anhydrase catalyzes cyanamide hydration to urea: is it mimicking the physiological reaction?

F Briganti1, S Mangani, A Scozzafava, G Vernaglione, C T Supuran.   

Abstract

The interaction of human carbonic anhydrase (hCA) isozymes I and II with cyanamide, a linear molecule isoelectronic with the main physiological substrate of the enzyme, CO(2), was investigated through spectroscopic, kinetic, and X-ray crystallographic studies. We show here that cyanamide is hydrated to urea in the presence of CAs, and that it also acts as a weak non-competitive inhibitor (K(I)=61+/-3 mM and 238+/-9 mM for hCA II and hCA I, respectively) towards the esterasic activity of these enzymes, as tested with 4-nitrophenyl acetate. Changes in the spectrum of the Co(II)-hCA II derivative observed in the presence of cyanamide suggest that it likely binds the metal ion within the CA active site, adding to the coordination sphere, not substituting the metal-bound solvent molecule. It thereafter undergoes a nucleophilic attack from the metal-bound hydroxide ion, forming urea which remains bound to the metal, as observed in the X-ray crystal structure of hCA II soaked in cyanamide solutions for several hours. The urea molecule is directly coordinated to the active site Zn(II) ion through a protonated nitrogen atom. Several hydrogen bonds involving active site residues Thr199 and Thr200 as well as three water molecules (Wat99, Wat122, and Wat123) further stabilize the urea-hCA II adduct. Kinetic studies in solution further proved that urea acts as a tight binding inhibitor of the two isozymes hCA I and hCA II, with very slow binding kinetics (k(on) = 2.5 x 10(-5)s(-1)M(-1)). A mechanism to explain the hydration process of cyanamide by CAs, as well as the tight binding of urea in the active site, is also proposed based on the hypothesis that urea is deprotonated when bound to the enzyme. Cyanamide is thus the first true suicide substrate of this enzyme for which binding has been documented by means of X-ray crystallographic and spectroscopic studies.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10550681     DOI: 10.1007/s007750050375

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Inorg Chem        ISSN: 0949-8257            Impact factor:   3.358


  7 in total

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Authors:  Vijay M Krishnamurthy; George K Kaufman; Adam R Urbach; Irina Gitlin; Katherine L Gudiksen; Douglas B Weibel; George M Whitesides
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 60.622

2.  Two duplicated genes DDI2 and DDI3 in budding yeast encode a cyanamide hydratase and are induced by cyanamide.

Authors:  Jia Li; Michael Biss; Yu Fu; Xin Xu; Stanley A Moore; Wei Xiao
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2015-04-06       Impact factor: 5.157

3.  Structure of Ddi2, a highly inducible detoxifying metalloenzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  Jia Li; Yunhua Jia; Aiyang Lin; Michelle Hanna; Linda Chelico; Wei Xiao; Stanley A Moore
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2019-05-31       Impact factor: 5.157

4.  α-Carbonic Anhydrases Possess Thioesterase Activity.

Authors:  Muhammet Tanc; Fabrizio Carta; Andrea Scozzafava; Claudiu T Supuran
Journal:  ACS Med Chem Lett       Date:  2015-01-19       Impact factor: 4.345

5.  Network of Conformational Transitions Revealed by Molecular Dynamics Simulations of the Carbonic Anhydrase II Apo-Enzyme.

Authors:  Huishu Ma; Anbang Li; Kaifu Gao
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2017-11-29

Review 6.  Reconsidering anion inhibitors in the general context of drug design studies of modulators of activity of the classical enzyme carbonic anhydrase.

Authors:  Alessio Nocentini; Andrea Angeli; Fabrizio Carta; Jean-Yves Winum; Raivis Zalubovskis; Simone Carradori; Clemente Capasso; William A Donald; Claudiu T Supuran
Journal:  J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem       Date:  2021-12       Impact factor: 5.051

7.  Structure and mechanism of copper-carbonic anhydrase II: a nitrite reductase.

Authors:  Jacob T Andring; Chae Un Kim; Robert McKenna
Journal:  IUCrJ       Date:  2020-02-21       Impact factor: 4.769

  7 in total

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