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Elucidating the role of metal ions in carbonic anhydrase catalysis

Biology

Elucidating the role of metal ions in carbonic anhydrase catalysis

J. K. Kim, C. Lee, et al.

This research by Jin Kyun Kim and colleagues unveils the pivotal role of metal ions in human carbonic anhydrase II's catalytic functions, revealing how metal coordination geometries and long-range electrostatic effects influence the enzyme's efficacy. Discover how these findings extend our understanding of enzymatic mechanisms beyond traditional chemical properties.... show more
Abstract
Why metalloenzymes often show dramatic changes in their catalytic activity when subjected to chemically similar but non-native metal substitutions is a long-standing puzzle. Here, we report on the catalytic roles of metal ions in a model metalloenzyme system, human carbonic anhydrase II (CA II). Through a comparative study on the intermediate states of the zinc-bound native CA II and non-native metal-substituted CA IIs, we demonstrate that the characteristic metal ion coordination geometries (tetrahedral for Zn2+, tetrahedral to octahedral conversion for Co2+, octahedral for Ni2+, and trigonal bipyramidal for Cu2+) directly modulate the catalytic efficacy. In addition, we reveal that the metal ions have a long-range (~10 Å) electrostatic effect on restructuring water network in the active site. Our study provides evidence that the metal ions in metalloenzymes have a crucial impact on the catalytic mechanism beyond their primary chemical properties.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 21, 2020
Authors
Jin Kyun Kim, Cheol Lee, Seon Woo Lim, Aniruddha Adhikari, Jacob T. Andring, Robert McKenna, Cheol-Min Ghim, Chae Un Kim
Tags
carbonic anhydrase II
metal ions
catalytic efficacy
coordination geometries
electrostatic effects
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