Carbonic Anhydrase: 3.3 Biochemistry of Zinc and Copper: Structure and Functions
Carbonic Anhydrase: 3.3 Biochemistry of Zinc and Copper: Structure and Functions
Carbonic Anhydrase: 3.3 Biochemistry of Zinc and Copper: Structure and Functions
Carbonic anhydrase
Carbonic anhydrase (contains Zn) - which catalyses the rapid inter conversion of
CO2 and water to bicarbonate and proton.
Carbonic
CO2 H2O anhydrase HCO3- H+
In the absence of carbonic anhydrase and at pH 7 the above reaction is very slow,
the rate constant being 10-3 s-1. The turnover of carbon dioxide by biological
systems is very high and a reaction with such a small rate constant cannot serve
the purpose. In presence of carbonic anhydrase, however the hydration of carbon
dioxide proceeds with a rate constant of 106 s-1, making it one of the fastest
enzymatic reactions.
N
N H N Zn O H
N Zn O N H O
N (a) H (c) H
-HCO3-
O O C O
N
O C
N Zn O H
N N H O
OH
N Zn (d) H
N
O H
O
(f) H
C O
N
N Zn O H
N H O
(e) H
a) The attachment of three histidine nitrogen’s to zinc (II) ion induces a
positive charge on the oxygen atom of the aqua ligand.
b) This results in a loss of proton, so that instead of a water molecule, a
hydroxide group now occupies the fourth coordination site of zinc.
c) For this reason the mechanism is called zinc-hydroxide pathway. Another
water molecule becomes attached to the hydroxyl group through hydrogen
bonding.
d) A CO2 molecule coordinates with intermediate (c). In this union, the carbon
of carbon dioxide becomes attached to the oxygen of hydroxyl group, while
one of the oxygen atoms of CO2 becomes attached to the proton of the
hydrogen- bonded water molecule.
e) Next the bond between O of the OH group and C of CO2 strengthens at the
cost of the bond between O and H of the OH group (c). The intermediate
(c) rearrange so that in transition state.
f) Zinc is 5 coordinated, being firmly bound to three histidine groups and
loosely to a bicarbonate group and an aqua ligand. Finally the bicarbonate
anion dissociates and the cycle starts once again. The net reaction is a
release of bicarbonate anion and a proton. The mechanism may proceed in
clockwise or anti-clockwise direction depending on the requirements of the
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biological systems.
Carboxypeptidase A
H2O
Pro Leu Glu Phe Pro Leu Glu Phenyl alanine
Carboxypeptidase A
R O R' O R''
H2O
CH C N C NH C COOH
H
Carboxy peptidase
R O R' R''
The enzyme consists of a protein chain of 307 amino acid residues plus one Zn2+
ion to yield a MW of about 34,600. The molecule is roughly egg shaped with
maximum dimension of approximately 5000 pm and a minimum of 3800 pm.
There is a cleft on one side that contains the zinc ion, the active site. The metal is
co-ordinates approximately tetrahedrally to –nitrogen atoms and an oxygen atom
from 3- amino acids (His 69, Glu 72 and His 169) in the protein chain.
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H H
O
Zn
Histidine N N
O
NH
N O C
H Histidine
H2C
Glutanic acid
The 4th coordination site is free to accept a pair of electron from a donor atom in
the substrate to be cleaved. The enzyme is thought to act through co-ordination
of the live atom to the carbonyl group of the amide linkage. In addition a nearby
hydrophobic pocket envelops the organic group of the amino acid to be cleaved
and those amino acids with aromatic side groups react most readily.
Accompanying these events is a change in conformation of the enzyme. The
argentine side chain moves about 200 pm closer to the carboxylate group of the
substrate and the phenolic group of the tyrosine comes within the hydrogen
bonding distance of the imido group of the C-terminal amino acid, a shift of 1200
pm. The hydrogen bonding to the free carboxyl group (by argentine) and the
amide linkage (by tyrosine) not only holds the substrate to the enzyme but helps
breaks the N—C bond. Nucleophilic displacement of the amide group of
attacking carboxylate group from glutamate group could form an anhydride link
to the remainder of the peptide chain. Hydrolysis of the anhydride could then
complete the cycle and regenerate the original enzyme. More likely, the glutamate
acts indirectly by polarizing a H2O molecule that attacks the amide linkage (N—
C linkage).
The protein performs a host of functions which are essential for the life processes.
The biological system of humans, as well as of other organism has the capacity
to biosynthesize the requisite proteins from amino acids the source of amino acids
are proteins that are consumed as part of the diet.
Active site
H
Zn
N
N N
His 69 O N H
O C His 169
CH2 CH2 H2C
Glu 72
The 3-amino acid residues (Arg.145, phenolic OH of Tyr – 248 and carboxylic
end of Glu – 270) are playing some important role in the enzymatic activity of
CPA.
Several powerful oxidants are produced during metabolic process both in blood
cells and other cells of the body. These include superoxide, hydrogen peroxide,
peroxy radicals and hydroxyl radicals. Reactions and chemicals which generate
these toxic oxidants are called pro-oxidants. On the other hand, reactions and
compounds which dispose of these species are called anti-oxidants and these
include NADPH, GSH, ascorbic acid and vitamin E. in a normal cell, there is an
appropriate pro oxidant: antioxidant balance. Superoxide dismutase, catalyze and
glutathione protect blood cells from oxidative stress and damage.
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Superoxide dismutase catalyses the rapid removal of the toxic superoxide anion
(O2-), the by-product of oxidative metabolism. The enzyme catalyzes the
conversion of superoxide to molecular oxygen and hydrogen peroxide.
Cytochrome C oxidase and may other enzymes can convert O2 to H2O without
the formation of the toxic intermediates. SOD is an enzyme that alternately
catalyses the dismutatin (or partitioning) of the superoxide (O2-) radical into either
ordinary molecular O2 or H2O2. Superoxide is produced as a byproduct of oxygen
metabolism and if not regulated causes many types of cell damage. SOD is an
important antioxidant defense in nearly all living cells exposed to O2.
SOD enzymes deal with the superoxide radical by alternately adding or removing
an electron from the superoxide molecules it encounters, thus changing O 2- into
one of two less damaging species either molecular O 2 or hydrogen peroxide
(H2O2). Hydrogen peroxide, itself a potentially harmful substance is rapidly
removed by the subsequent action of enzymes such as catalase. Thus working
together SOD and catalase help in protecting the organism which utilize dioxygen
from potentially toxic by-products of O2 metabolism.
O2
3- types of SOD are known. The first characterized is Cu, Zn containing SOD
which exists in eukaryotic cells. In micro organisms Fe-SOD and Mn-SOD are
found. Cu-Zn SOD is quite stable than later SOD’s because it does not release
toxic metal Cu2+ or Cu+. Mn-SOD and Fe-SOD have distorted Trigonal-
bipyramidal structure in which metal is four coordinated to three histidine
residues and one tyrosine residue.
H2O
N-His N-His
Asp-O Fe Asp-O Mn
N-His N-His
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N-His N-His
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The SOD catalyzed dismutation of superoxide may write for CU-Zn SOD as
follows;
1. Cu2+—SOD + O− +
2 ⟶ Cu — SOD + O2
2. Cu2+—SOD + O− + 2+
2 + 2H ⟶ Cu —SOD + H2 O2
The general form applicable to all the different metal-coordinated forms of SOD
can be written as follows;
61 His
In Cu-Zn SOD, the role of Zn (II) is structural only. Zn can be replaced by other
divalent metals with the retention of most of the catalytic activity. But the
presence of Cu (II) is essential for SOD activity. It has been found that the Zn-
depleted protein lacks in thermal stability and it denatures at lower temperature
than the native protein.
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