4.4 Article

Characterization of CamH from Methanosarcina thermophila, Founding Member of a Subclass of the γ Class of Carbonic Anhydrases

Journal

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
Volume 192, Issue 5, Pages 1353-1360

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.01164-09

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Thomas H. Maren Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The homotrimeric enzyme Mt-Cam from Methanosarcina thermophila is the archetype of the gamma class of carbonic anhydrases. A search of databases queried with Mt-Cam revealed that a majority of the homologs comprise a putative subclass (CamH) in which there is major conservation of all of the residues essential for the archetype Mt-Cam except Glu62 and an acidic loop containing the essential proton shuttle residue Glu84. The CamH homolog from M. thermophila (Mt-CamH) was overproduced in Escherichia coli and characterized to validate its activity and initiate an investigation of the CamH subclass. The Mt-CamH homotrimer purified from E. coli cultured with supplemental zinc (Zn-Mt-CamH) contained 0.71 zinc and 0.15 iron per monomer and had k(cat) and k(cat)/K-m values that were substantially lower than those for the zinc form of Mt-Cam (Zn-Mt-Cam). Mt-CamH purified from E. coli cultured with supplemental iron (Fe-Mt-CamH) was also a trimer containing 0.15 iron per monomer and only a trace amount of zinc and had an effective k(cat) (k(cat)(eff)) value normalized for iron that was 6-fold less than that for the iron form of Mt-Cam, whereas the k(cat)/K-m(eff) was similar to that for Fe-Mt-Cam. Addition of 50 mM imidazole to the assay buffer increased the k(cat)(eff) of Fe-Mt-CamH more than 4-fold. Fe-Mt-CamH lost activity when it was exposed to air or 3% H2O2, which supports the hypothesis that Fe2+ has a role in the active site. The k(cat) for Fe-Mt-CamH was dependent on the concentration of buffer in a way that indicates that it acts as a second substrate in a ping-pong mechanism accepting a proton. The k(cat)/K-m was not dependent on the buffer, consistent with the mechanism for all carbonic anhydrases in which the interconversion of CO2 and HCO3- is separate from intermolecular proton transfer.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available