In catalyzing the reversible hydration of CO2 to bicarbonateand protons, the ubiquitous enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA) playsa crucial role in CO2 transport, in acid-base balance, and inlinking local acidosis to O2 unloading from hemoglobin. Consideringthe structural similarity between bicarbonate and nitrite, wehypothesized that CA uses nitrite as a substrate to producethe potent vasodilator nitric oxide (NO) to increase local bloodflow to metabolically active tissues. Here we show that CA readilyreacts with nitrite to generate NO, particularly at low pH,and that the NO produced in the reaction induces vasodilationin aortic rings. This reaction occurs under normoxic and hypoxicconditions and in various tissues at physiological levels ofCA and nitrite. Furthermore, two specific inhibitors of theCO2 hydration, dorzolamide and acetazolamide, increase the CA-catalyzedproduction of vasoactive NO from nitrite. This enhancing effectmay explain the known vasodilating effects of these drugs andindicates that CO2 and nitrite bind differently to the enzymeactive site. Kinetic analyses show a higher reaction rate athigh pH, suggesting that anionic nitrite participates more effectivelyin catalysis. Taken together, our results reveal a novel nitrousanhydrase enzymatic activity of CA that would function to linkthe in vivo main end products of energy metabolism (CO2/H+)to the generation of vasoactive NO. The CA-mediated NO productionmay be important to the correlation between blood flow and metabolicactivity in tissues, as occurring for instance in active areasof the brain.
Original language
English
Journal
American Journal of Physiology: Heart and Circulatory Physiology