Carbamoyl phosphate synthase has three main steps in its mechanism and is, in essence, irreversible.
Bicarbonate ion is phosphorylated with ATP to create carboxylphosphate.
The carboxylphosphate then reacts with ammonia to form carbamic acid, releasing inorganic phosphate.
A second molecule of ATP then phosphorylates carbamic acid, creating carbamoyl phosphate.
The activity of the enzyme is known to be inhibited by both Tris and HEPES buffers.
Structure
Carbamoyl phosphate synthase is a heterodimeric enzyme composed of a small and a large subunit. CPSase has three active sites, one in the small subunit and two in the large subunit. The small subunit contains the glutamine binding site and catalyses the hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamate and ammonia, which is in turn used by the large chain to synthesize carbamoyl phosphate. The small subunit has a 3-layer beta/beta/alpha structure, and is thought to be mobile in most proteins that carry it. The C-terminal domain of the small subunit of CPSase has glutamine amidotransferase activity. The large subunit has two homologous carboxy phosphate domains, both of which have ATP-binding sites; however, the N-terminal carboxy phosphate domain catalyses the phosphorylation of biocarbonate, while the C-terminal domain catalyses the phosphorylation of the carbamateintermediate. The carboxy phosphate domain found duplicated in the large subunit of CPSase is also present as a single copy in the biotin-dependent enzymesacetyl-CoA carboxylase, propionyl-CoA carboxylase, pyruvate carboxylase and urea carboxylase. The large subunit in bacterial CPSase has four structural domains: the carboxy phosphate domain 1, the oligomerisation domain, the carbamoyl phosphate domain 2 and the allosteric domain. CPSase heterodimers from Escherichia coli contain two molecular tunnels: an ammonia tunnel and a carbamate tunnel. These inter-domain tunnels connect the three distinct active sites, and function as conduits for the transport of unstable reaction intermediates between successive active sites. The catalytic mechanism of CPSase involves the diffusion of carbamate through the interior of the enzyme from the site of synthesis within the N-terminal domain of the large subunit to the site of phosphorylation within the C-terminal domain.