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김채운

Kim, Chae Un
High Pressure X-ray Science Lab.
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Structure and mechanism of copper-carbonic anhydrase II: A nitrite reductase

Author(s)
Andring, Jacob T.Kim, Chae UnMcKenna, Robert
Issued Date
2020-03
DOI
10.1107/S2052252521000208
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/31853
Fulltext
https://journals.iucr.org/m/issues/2021/02/00/me6114/index.html
Citation
IUCRJ, v.7, no.1, pp.287 - 293
Abstract
Nitric oxide (NO) promotes vasodilation through the activation of guanylate cyclase, resulting in the relaxation of the smooth muscle vasculature and a subsequent decrease in blood pressure. Therefore, its regulation is of interest for the treatment and prevention of heart disease. An example is pulmonary hypertension which is treated by targeting this NO/vasodilation pathway. In bacteria, plants and fungi, nitrite (NO2 -) is utilized as a source of NO through enzymes known as nitrite reductases. These enzymes reduce NO2 - to NO through a catalytic metal ion, often copper. Recently, several studies have shown nitrite reductase activity of mammalian carbonic anhydrase II (CAII), yet the molecular basis for this activity is unknown. Here we report the crystal structure of copper-bound human CAII (Cu-CAII) in complex with NO2 - at 1.2 Å resolution. The structure exhibits Type 1 (T-1) and 2 (T-2) copper centers, analogous to bacterial nitrite reductases, both required for catalysis. The copper-substituted CAII active site is penta-coordinated with a 'side-on' bound NO2 -, resembling a T-2 center. At the N terminus, several residues that are normally disordered form a porphyrin ring-like configuration surrounding a second copper, acting as a T-1 center. A structural comparison with both apo-(without metal) and zinc-bound CAII (Zn-CAII) provides a mechanistic picture of how, in the presence of copper, CAII, with minimal conformational changes, can function as a nitrite reductase. © 2020 Andring et al.
Publisher
INT UNION CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
ISSN
2052-2525
Keyword (Author)
catalytic metal ionscopper-carbonic anhydrase IIapo-carbonic anhydrase IInitrite reductasesnitric oxideX-ray crystallography

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