Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.1.7 (acetylcholinesterase)
28,390 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) contributes importantly to the mobilization of fatty acids from the triacylglycerols stored in adipocytes, which provide the main source of energy in mammals. On the basis of amino acid sequence alignments and three-dimensional structures, this enzyme was previously found to be a suitable template for defining a family of serine carboxylester hydrolases. In this study, the HSL family members are characterized rather on the basis of their inhibition by 5-methoxy-3-(4-phenoxyphenyl)-3H-[1,3,4]oxadiazol-2-one (compound 7600). This compound inhibits mammalian HSL as well as other HSL family members, such as EST2 from the thermophilic eubacterium Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius and AFEST from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus. Various carboxylester hydrolases that are not members of the HSL family were found not to be inhibited by compound 7600 under the same experimental conditions. These include nonlipolytic hydrolases such as Torpedo californica acetylcholinesterase and pig liver esterase, as well as lipolytic hydrolases such as human pancreatic lipase, dog gastric lipase, Thermomyces lanuginosus lipase, and Bacillus subtilis LipA. When vinyl esters were used as substrates, the residual activity of HSL, AFEST, and EST2 decreased with an increase in compound 7600 concentration in the incubation mixture. The inhibitor concentration at which the enzyme activity decreased to 50% after incubation for 5 min was 70, 20, and 15 nM with HSL, AFEST, and EST2, respectively. Treating EST2 and AFEST with the inhibitor resulted in an increase in the molecular mass, as established by performing matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry analysis. This increase in the molecular mass, which corresponds approximately to the molecular mass of the inhibitor, indicates that a covalent enzyme-inhibitor complex has been formed. Surface-enhanced laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry analysis of a trypsin digest of AFEST treated with the inhibitor or not treated showed the occurrence of an increase in the molecular masses of the "GESAGG"-containing peptide, which is compatible with the formation of a covalent complex with the inhibitor.
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PMID:Use of an inhibitor to identify members of the hormone-sensitive lipase family. 1711 13

Kinetic studies of irreversible inhibition in recent years have received growing attention owing to their relevance to problems of basic scientific interest as well as to their practical importance. Our studies have been devoted to the characterization of the effects that well-known acetylcholinesterase irreversible inhibitors exert on a carboxylesterase (EST2) from the thermophilic eubacterium Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius. In particular, sulfonyl inhibitors and the organophosphorous insecticide diethyl-p-nitrophenyl phosphate (paraoxon) have been studied. The incubation of EST2 with sulfonyl inhibitors resulted in a time-dependent inactivation according to a pseudo-first-order kinetics. On the other hand, the EST2 inactivation process elicited by paraoxon, being the inhibition reaction completed immediately after the inhibitor addition, cannot be described as a pseudo-first-order kinetics but is better considered as a high affinity inhibition. The values of apparent rate constants for paraoxon inactivation were determined by monitoring the enzyme/substrate reaction in the presence of the inhibitor, and were compared with those of the sulfonyl inhibitors. The protective effect afforded by a competitive inhibitor on the EST2 irreversible inhibition, and the reactivation of a complex enzyme/irreversible-inhibitor by hydroxylamine and 2-PAM, were also investigated. The data have been discussed in the light of the recently described dual substrate binding mode of EST2, considering that the irreversible inhibitors employed were able to discriminate between the two different binding sites.
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PMID:Irreversible inhibition of the thermophilic esterase EST2 from Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius. 1862 71