Promiscuity of Carbonic Anhydrase II. Unexpected Ester Hydrolysis of Carbohydrate-Based Sulfamate Inhibitors

Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) are enzymes whose endogenous reaction is the reversible hydration of CO2 to give HCO3 – and a proton. CA are also known to exhibit weak and promiscuous esterase activity toward activated esters. Here, we report a series of findings obtained with a set of CA inhibitors that...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011-11, Vol.133 (45), p.18452-18462
Hauptverfasser: Lopez, Marie, Vu, Hoan, Wang, Conan K, Wolf, Maarten G, Groenhof, Gerrit, Innocenti, Alessio, Supuran, Claudiu T, Poulsen, Sally-Ann
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) are enzymes whose endogenous reaction is the reversible hydration of CO2 to give HCO3 – and a proton. CA are also known to exhibit weak and promiscuous esterase activity toward activated esters. Here, we report a series of findings obtained with a set of CA inhibitors that showed quite unexpectedly that the compounds were both inhibitors of CO2 hydration and substrates for the esterase activity of CA. The compounds comprised a monosaccharide core with the C-6 primary hydroxyl group derivatized as a sulfamate (for CA recognition). The remaining four sugar hydroxyl groups were acylated. Using protein X-ray crystallography, the crystal structures of human CA II in complex with four of the sulfamate inhibitors were obtained. As expected, the four structures displayed the canonical CA protein–sulfamate interactions. Unexpectedly, a free hydroxyl group was observed at the anomeric center (C-1) rather than the parent C-1 acyl group. In addition, this hydroxyl group is observed axial to the carbohydrate ring while in the parent structure it is equatorial. A mechanism is proposed that accounts for this inversion of stereochemistry. For three of the inhibitors, the acyl groups at C-2 or at C-2 and C-3 were also absent with hydroxyl groups observed in their place and retention of stereochemistry. With the use of electrospray ionization–Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance–mass spectrometry (ESI–FTICR–MS), we observed directly the sequential loss of all four acyl groups from one of the carbohydrate-based sulfamates. For this compound, the inhibitor and substrate binding mode were further analyzed using free energy calculations. These calculations suggested that the parent compound binds almost exclusively as a substrate. To conclude, we have demonstrated that acylated carbohydrate-based sulfamates are simultaneously inhibitor and substrate of human CA II. Our results suggest that, initially, the substrate binding mode dominates, but following hydrolysis, the ligand can also bind as a pure inhibitor thereby competing with the substrate binding mode.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/ja207855c