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Tracking solvent and protein movement during CO2 release in carbonic anhydrase II crystals

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

C.U. Kim
H. Song
B.S. Avvaru
Sol Gruner
S. Park
R. McKenna

Abstract

Carbonic anhydrases are mostly zinc metalloenzymes that catalyze the reversible hydration/dehydration of CO2/HCO3-. Previously, the X-ray crystal structures of CO2-bound holo (zinc-bound) and apo (zinc-free) human carbonic anhydrase IIs (hCA IIs) were captured at high resolution. Here, we present sequential timeframe structures of holo- [T = 0 s (CO2-bound), 50 s, 3 min, 10 min, 25 min, and 1 h] and apo-hCA IIs [T = 0 s, 50 s, 3 min, and 10 min] during the "slow" release of CO2. Two active site waters, WDW (deep water) and WDW′ (this study), replace the vacated space created on CO2 release, and another water, WI (intermediate water), is seen to translocate to the proton wire position W1. In addition, on the rim of the active site pocket, a water W2′ (this study), in close proximity to residue His64 and W2, gradually exits the active site, whereas His64 concurrently rotates from pointing away ("out") to pointing toward ("in") active site rotameric conformation. This study provides for the first time, to our knowledge, structural "snapshots" of hCA II intermediate states during the formation of the His64-mediated proton wire that is induced as CO2 is released. Comparison of the holo- and apo-hCA II structures shows that the solvent network rearrangements require the presence of the zinc ion.

Date Published

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Volume

113

Issue

19

Number of Pages

5257-5262,

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84966372880&doi=10.1073%2fpnas.1520786113&partnerID=40&md5=83df9df82631651c887ed5b24b60d265

DOI

10.1073/pnas.1520786113

Group (Lab)

Sol M. Gruner Group

Funding Source

DMR-1332208
GM-103485
R01GM025154
2013R1A1A2005276
2014R1A2A1A11051254

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