“…2,9 CAIs of the sulfonamide type have been used clinically for decades, 3 for various classes of diuretics and systemically acting antiglaucoma agents, but their main drawback is their potent inhibition of CA I and II, ubiquitous enzymes playing important physiological roles. 3,4,10 Thus, critical barriers to the use of CAIs as therapeutic agents are related to the large number of isoforms in humans (i.e., 15 CAs, of which 12 have catalytic activity), their diffuse localization in many tissues and organs, and the lack of isozyme selectivity for many of the presently available inhibitors of the sulfonamide and/or sulfamate type. 3,4,10−13 Thus, there is a stringent need for CAIs with an inhibition profile more selective than those of the classical sulfonamides and their isosteres, and the coumarins represent an interesting such class because of the fact that several isoform-selective CAIs targeting CA isoforms IX, XII, and XIII have been reported recently by our group.…”