Abstract

The reversible complex between the metalloenzyme bovine carbonic anhydrase B and the sulfonamide inhibitor acetazolamide can be "frozen" irreversibly by the addition of a covalent bond between the methyl group of the inhibitor and the tau-nitrogen of histidine-64. In both cases the inhibited enzyme is inactive as an esterase toward p-nitrophenyl propionate at physiological pH but retains activity controlled by an ionization in the protein exhibiting a pK-a greater than 10. Similarly, both the covalently and reversibly inhibited enzymes in which the catalytically essential Zn(II) ion has been replaced with Co(II) display the same visible absorption spectrum which is invariant over the pH range from 5 to 12. The evidence therefore indicates that the position of the acetazolamide moiety in the active site is independent of both pH and the presence of the covalent bond to histidine-64. Moreover, when reversibly bound, this inhibitor has been shown to replace the water molecule (or hydroxide ion) known to occupy the fourth coordination position of the metal ion and frequently implicated in the catalytic mechanism of carbonic anhydrases. Thus, the activity exhibited by the inhibited enzymes and consequently the second rise observed in the pH rate profile of the native enzyme above pH 0 cannot reflect the ionization of such a water molecule in contrast to what has been postulated previously (Pocker, Y., and Storm, D. R. (1968) Biochemistry 7, 1202-1214). Displacement of the zinc-bound solvent molecule rather than the alkylation of histidine-64 is suggested, however, as the cause of the inactivation of the alkylated enzyme round neutrality. Taken together, the biphasic pH rate profile of native bovine carbonic anhydrase B as well as the activity retained by the alkylated enzyme above pH 9 are best described by a model in which two groups in the enzyme ionize independently, thereby raising the possibility that the high pH activity is controlled by an ionization outside the active site region of the enzyme. Above pH 9.5 the pK; for the reversible interaction between native carbonic anhydrase and acetazolamide falls off linearly with increasing pH. The slope of --1.56 suggests that, among other factors, more than one ionization is responsible for the descending limb of the pH-i-pH profile.

Highlights

  • The reversible complex between the metalloenzyme bovine carbonic anhydrase B and the sulfonamide inhibitor acetazolamide can be “frozen” irreversibly by the addition of a covalent bond between the methyl group of the inhibitor and the r-nitrogen of histidine-64

  • The evidence indicates that the position of the acetazolamide moiety in the active site is independent of both pH and the presence of the covalent bond to histidine-64

  • The activity exhibited by the inhibited enzymes and the second rise observed in the pH rate profile of the native enzyme above pH 9 cannot reflect the ionization of such a water molecule in contrast to what has been postulated previously

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Summary

REVERSIBLE AND COVALENT INHIBITION BY ACETAZOLAMIDE*

The reversible complex between the metalloenzyme bovine carbonic anhydrase B and the sulfonamide inhibitor acetazolamide can be “frozen” irreversibly by the addition of a covalent bond between the methyl group of the inhibitor and the r-nitrogen of histidine-64 In both cases the inhibited enzyme is inactive as an esterase toward p-nitrophenyl propionate at physiological pH but retains activity controlled by an ionization in the protein exhibiting a pK, greater than 10. 1968, Packer et al [8,9,10,11,12,13,14] have demonstrated that with certain substrates above pH 9 bovine carbonic anhydrase B exhibits a second rise in activity corresponding to an ionizing group with a pK, above 10.5 These authors have assigned the lower and higher points of inflection in the pH activity profile to a histidyl residue and to the zinc-bound water molecule, respectively. The data argue against a catalytic mechanism in which a metal-bound water molecule ionizes above pH 9

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
TABLE I
AlQrlated bovine carbonic anhydrase B
Inhibition of Bovine Carbonic
Values of the parameters were obtained by iteration in fitting
DISCUSSION
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