1CAO
CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC STUDIES OF THE BINDING OF PROTONATED AND UNPROTONATED INHIBITORS TO CARBONIC ANHYDRASE USING HYDROGEN SULPHIDE AND NITRATE ANIONS
Summary for 1CAO
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb1cao/pdb |
Descriptor | CARBONIC ANHYDRASE II, ZINC ION, HYDROSULFURIC ACID, ... (4 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | lyase(oxo-acid) |
Biological source | Homo sapiens (human) |
Cellular location | Cytoplasm : P00918 |
Total number of polymer chains | 1 |
Total formula weight | 29283.39 |
Authors | Mangani, S.,Hakansson, K. (deposition date: 1992-07-02, release date: 1994-01-31, Last modification date: 2024-10-23) |
Primary citation | Mangani, S.,Hakansson, K. Crystallographic studies of the binding of protonated and unprotonated inhibitors to carbonic anhydrase using hydrogen sulphide and nitrate anions. Eur.J.Biochem., 210:867-871, 1992 Cited by PubMed Abstract: The structures of human carbonic-anhydrase-II complexes with the anionic inhibitors hydrogen sulphide (HS-) and nitrate (NO3-) have been determined by X-ray diffraction at 0.19-nm resolution from crystals soaked at pH 7.8 and 6.0, respectively. The modes of binding of these two anions differ markedly from each other. The strong inhibitor HS- replaces the native zinc-bound water/hydroxide (Wat263) leaving the tetrahedral metal geometry unaltered and acts as a hydrogen-bonding donor towards Thr199 gamma. The weak NO3- inhibitor does not displace Wat263 from the metal coordination but occupies a fifth binding site changing the zinc coordination polyhedron into a slightly distorted trigonal bipyramid. The interaction of NO3- with the metal is weak; the nearest of its oxygen atoms being at a distance of 0.28 nm from the zinc ion. The binding of nitrate to the enzyme is completed by a hydrogen bond to the metal coordinated Wat263 and a second one to a water molecule of the active-site cavity. The structures of the two complexes help to rationalize the binding of anionic inhibitors to carbonic anhydrase and the binding mode displayed by NO39 may be relevant to the catalytic mechanism. PubMed: 1336460DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1992.tb17490.x PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.9 Å) |
Structure validation
Download full validation report