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)

The molecular specificity for the blocking action of thyroxine on the triiodothyronine effect in the cooperativity of membrane-bound rat erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase and Escherichia coli Ca2+-ATPase was analyzed. Changes in the values of n (Hill coefficient) were obtained at strict physiological levels of these hormones. The structural requirements of the thyroid hormones to modify the membrane-bound systems were studied using various analogues of these hormones. In the erythrocyte system, a very high molecular specificity for triiodothyronine and thyroxine actions was found. The L-alanine side is essential to carry out both the allosteric desensitization and the blocking effects. The blocking ability of thyroxine is characterized by the presence of iodine in the 5' position. The bacterial system presented only specificity for the triiodothyronine allosteric desensitization. A system of membrane-bound enzymes for the study of the actions of thyroid hormones, is presented here.
...
PMID:Membrane cooperative enzymes. High molecular specificity for blocking action of thyroxine on triiodothyronine effect in rat erythrocyte and Escherichia coli systems. 15 Apr 17

In 30 workers being occupationally exposed to beryllium, examinations of biochemical indicators of liver efficiency were carried out: activity of alanine and asparagine aminotraspherase and basic phosphatases, cholinesterase, content of total protein and its fraction. Levels of electrolytes were determined: calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and magnesium. The above examinations were also carried out on 30 persons who have no contact with beryllium. The obtained results were subjected to statistical analysis. In 10 persons from the group exposed to beryllium one found lowering of the level of magnesium in blood serum, whereas in the control group the level of this electrolyte was correct in all persons. As to the results on the level of magnesium, in both groups high statistical significance was found (p less than 0,01). A dependence was found between the amount of workers and the lowered level of magnesium in blood serum and the duration of occupational exposure to beryllium. The comparison of the remaining results of examinations of both groups did not reveal any statistically significant differences or the differences were at the point of statistical significance.
...
PMID:[Behavior of various biochemical indices of liver efficiency and of selected blood serum electrolytes in workers exposed to beryllium]. 19 75

The activities of aspartate transminase (EC 2.6.1.1), alanine transminase (EC 2.6.1.2), alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1), acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.2) leucine arylamidase (EC 3.4.1.1), aldolase (EC 4.1.2), lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27), malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.38) and cholinesterase (EC 3.1.1.7) were measured in serum of male rabbits and albino Wistar rats in dlplicate by means of microliter techniques. Furthermore, the diurnal alterations of enzyme activity were established in 8--10 animals of both species. Aspartate transaminase activity in the serum of rats was found to be significantly higher than in the serum of humans and rabbits, and essentially lower alkaline phosphatase values were obtained from the serum of rabbits in comparison with those found for the serum of humans and rats. Relatively high acid phosphatase and aldolase values as well as a very low cholinesterase activity were found in the serum of rabbits and rats. The mean malate dehydrogenase-activity was found to be twice as high as the mean lactate dehydrogenase, which is the contrary of the situation found in human serum. No significant diural alterations of the examined enzyme activities were established. The differences found between the animal and the human enzyme activities in serum are explained by species-determined peculiarities of metabolism or specific enzyme configuration.
...
PMID:[Enzyme activities in serum of rabbits and rats-reference values and circadian alterations. Serum enzymes and factors that influence their activity,I (AUTHOR'S TRANSL)]. 103 68

The aim of the study was to evaluate the suitability of enzymatic tests for estimating the effects of organic solvents upon the organisms of daily exposed workers. The analysis was undertaken in 572 workers exposed to such solvents as toluene, xylene, cresols and benzine. Periodical examination was carried out for the purposes of the study. The level of excreting organic solvents' metabolites in urine and serum enzymes' activity were determined. Also, the activity of alanine and aspartate aminotransferases and of plasmatic cholinesterase was determined. The results of the study support the necessity of applying the enzymatic tests as a basic method of evaluating the toxic activity of organic solvents.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of the usefulness of enzyme tests for the diagnosis of the effects of various organic solvents in the conditions of occupational exposure]. 143 46

A high-salt soluble form of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) was purified from monkey (Macaca radiata) whole diaphragm by a two step affinity chromatographic procedure using m-aminophenyl trimethylammonium-chloride hydrochloride-Sepharose and procainamide-Sepharose columns. The purified enzyme showed three major protein bands at 80 kDa, 78 kDa and 60 kDa on SDS-gel electrophoresis. [3H]Diisopropyl fluorophosphate ([3H]DFP) labeled enzyme also gave three radioactive peaks corresponding to these three bands. The purified enzyme pretreated with dithiothreitol and subjected to limited trypsin digestion gave a peptide fragment of molecular weight approximately 300 Da showing weak acetylthiocholine hydrolyzing activity as identified by Sephadex G-25 gel filtration. Sequence analysis showed that the active peptide fragment was a tripeptide with the sequence Ala-Gly-Ser. When the purified AChE was labeled with [3H]DFP, digested with trypsin and subjected to Sephadex G-25 chromatography, a radioactive peak that would correspond to the tripeptide fragment was seen. The kinetics, inhibition characteristics and binding characteristics to lectins of the active peptide fragment was compared with the parent enzyme. A synthetic peptide of sequence Ala-Gly-Ser was also found to exhibit acetylthiocholine hydrolyzing activity. The kinetics and inhibition characteristics of the synthetic peptide was similar to those of the peptide derived from the purified enzyme, except that the synthetic peptide was more specific towards acetylthiocholine than butyrylthiocholine. The specific activity (units/mg) of the synthetic peptide was about 29480 times less than that of the purified AChE.
...
PMID:Isolation of a tripeptide (Ala-Gly-Ser) exhibiting weak acetylthiocholine hydrolyzing activity from a high-salt soluble form of monkey diaphragm acetylcholinesterase. 151 18

Evidence for the involvement of Ser-203, His-447, and Glu-334 in the catalytic triad of human acetylcholinesterase was provided by substitution of these amino acids by alanine residues. Of 20 amino acid positions mutated so far in human acetylcholinesterase (AChE), these three were unique in abolishing detectable enzymatic activity (less than 0.0003 of wild type), yet allowing proper production, folding, and secretion. This is the first biochemical evidence for the involvement of a glutamate in a hydrolase triad (Schrag, J.D., Li, Y., Wu, M., and Cygler, M. (1991) Nature 351, 761-764), supporting the x-ray crystal structure data of the Torpedo californica acetylcholinesterase (Sussman, J.L., Harel, M., Frolow, F., Oefner, C., Goldman, A., Toker, L. and Silman, I. (1991) Science 253, 872-879). Attempts to convert the AChE triad into a Cys-His-Glu or Ser-His-Asp configuration by site-directed mutagenesis did not yield effective AChE activity. Another type of substitution, that of Asp-74 by Gly or Asn, generated an active enzyme with increased resistance to succinylcholine and dibucaine; thus mimicking in an AChE molecule the phenotype of the atypical butyrylcholinesterase natural variant (D70G mutation). Mutations of other carboxylic residues Glu-84, Asp-95, Asp-333, and Asp-349, all conserved among cholinesterases, did not result in detectable alteration in the recombinant AChE, although polypeptide productivity of the D95N mutant was considerably lower. In contrast, complete absence of secreted human AChE polypeptide was observed when Asp-175 or Asp-404 were substituted by Asn. These two aspartates are conserved in the entire cholinesterase/thyroglobulin family and appear to play a role in generating and/or maintaining the folded state of the polypeptide. The x-ray structure of the Torpedo acetylcholinesterase supports this assumption by revealing the participation of these residues in salt bridges between neighboring secondary structure elements.
...
PMID:Mutagenesis of human acetylcholinesterase. Identification of residues involved in catalytic activity and in polypeptide folding. 151 12

The distribution of amino acids between plasma, liver and brain was studied in adult male rats, fed a diet containing 8.7, 17 (control animals), 32 and 51% of protein during 15 days. The caloric intake was nearly equal in all groups. The highest food intake was observed in the animals on the low protein diet. Changes in plasma amino acids were variable. In contrast to the behavior of most amino acids in plasma, the branched chain amino acids were highest in the animals fed the 51% protein diet. Despite the low protein intake in the animals fed a 8.7% protein diet, the concentration of serine, glutamic acid, glutamine, glycine, alanine, methionine, isoleucine, leucine, phenylalanine and ornithine were significantly higher compared to control animals, whereas in those receiving a high protein diet, valine, leucine, tyrosine, tryptophan and histidine increased in relation to the increased protein and amino acid intake. The plasma amino acid patterns are not greatly influenced by the amino acid distribution in the food and the amount ingested. Alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, glutamate dehydrogenase and cholinesterase showed a two- to fivefold increased activity in the liver of animals consuming a high protein diet. In the brain, the concentration of valine, leucine, isoleucine, phenylalanine and tyrosine in animals receiving the low protein diet was higher than in controls and increased further with increasing protein content of the diet. Glutamine was increased in all dietary groups. The predicted influx of amino acids showed increasing influx rates in dependence of the plasma amino acid concentration. The entry of tyrosine and tryptophan and their brain concentration was inversely proportional to the protein content of the diet. In the present study which considers long-term adaptation to an increasing protein and amino acid intake in comparison to a balanced control protein diet, the levels of the indispensable amino acids were maintained within narrow limits in the brain and liver. The results indicate that inspite of a variable protein intake, the body tends to keep organ amino acids in relatively narrow limits favoring in this way amino acid homeostasis.
...
PMID:Effect of different protein diets on the distribution of amino acids in plasma, liver and brain in the rat. 159 Jun 69

Neurotoxic properties of L-beta-methylamino-alanine (L-BMAA) after chronic intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) (500 micrograms/day) administration up to 60 days were investigated in the cerebral cortex of the rat. At day 16, there was a significant decrease in acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity, 3H-QNB binding, 3H-glutamate (GLU) binding, and 3H-glutamate binding in the presence of quisqualate (QA). Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity and 3H-nicotine binding were increased at day 16; however, ChAT activity decreased below control levels at days 40 and 60. 3H-Nicotine and 3H-AMPA binding were significantly lower than controls at both days 40 and 60. These significant neurochemical differences from unoperated controls were seen in both drug-injected and non-injected sides of the cortex suggesting a generalized cortical damage to glutamatergic and cholinergic systems. In the presence of bicarbonate, L-BMAA inhibited in vitro both glutamate and AMPA binding sites. L-BMAA treatment elicited behavioral changes such as splay, jerking movements, and rigidity. These symptoms were present for a period of at least 6 days after daily administration. After this period, symptoms were gradually attenuated and at day 10 the behavior of the L-BMAA-treated animals was not different from that of Na-bicarbonate injected controls. Our results are interpreted as an activation of quisqualate (AMPA) receptors by L-BMAA involving NMDA as well as non-NMDA receptors.
...
PMID:Effects of L-beta-N-methylamino-L-alanine (L-BMAA) on the cortical cholinergic and glutamatergic systems of the rat. 165 66

Site-directed mutagenesis was used to study the cysteine residue involved in the assembly of human acetylcholinesterase (HuAChE) catalytic subunits. Substitution of the cysteine at position 580 by alanine resulted in impairment of interchain disulfide bridge formation; the mutagenized enzyme (C580A) was secreted from recombinant cells in the monomeric form and failed to assemble into dimers. The mutant monomeric HuAChE did not differ from the native oligomeric enzyme neither in rate of catalysis nor in affinity to acetylthiocholine. Mutant monomers were also shown to retain the acetylcholinesterase characteristic sensitivity to high substrate concentrations. The mutation did not seem to affect the efficiencies of either synthesis or secretion of recombinant HuAChE polypeptides, as was demonstrated in cell lines derived from human embryonic kidney (293 cells) as well as from a human neuroblastoma (SK-N-SH). Furthermore, the mutation did not lead to an increase in accumulation of intracellular HuAChE polypeptides, suggesting that export of acetylcholinesterase from cells may not be coupled to subunit assembly.
...
PMID:The effect of elimination of intersubunit disulfide bonds on the activity, assembly, and secretion of recombinant human acetylcholinesterase. Expression of acetylcholinesterase Cys-580----Ala mutant. 174 70

The structure and some functional sites of human milk bile salt activated lipase (BAL) were studied by cDNA cloning and chemical analysis of the enzyme. Eighteen cDNA clones of human BAL were identified from lactating human breast cDNA libraries in lambda gt11 and lambda gt10 with antibody and synthetic oligonucleotides as probes. The sequence of four clones was sufficient to construct a 3018-bp BAL cDNA structure. This sequence codes for an open reading frame of 742 amino acid residues. There is a putative signal sequence of 20 residues which is followed by the amino-terminal sequence of BAL, and the mature BAL contains 722 amino acid residues. The cDNA sequence also contains a 678-base 5'-untranslated sequence, a 97-base 3'-untranslated region, and a 14-base poly(A) tail. The sequence of a 1.8-kbp insert of clone G10-4A differs from that of the other cDNA in that it contains a deletion of 198 bases (1966-2163) corresponding to 66 amino acid residues. By use of BAL cDNA as probe, it was found that the major molecular species of BAL mRNA in human mammary gland HBL-100 cells had a size of 2.9 kb and two minor species had sizes of 3.8 and 5.1 kb by Northern blot analyses. The deduced BAL protein structure contains in the carboxyl-terminal region 16 repeating units of 11 amino acids each. The repeating units have the basic structure Pro-Val-Pro-Pro-Thr-Gly-Asp-Ser-Gly-Ala-Pro with only minor substitutions. The amino acid sequence of human BAL is related to that of pancreatic lysophospholipase, cholesterol esterase, cholinesterase, acetylcholinesterase, and thyroglobulin. Ten of the 14 cyanogen bromide fragments of diisopropyl fluorophosphate inhibited human milk BAL were isolated, determined for N-terminal sequences, analyzed for amino sugars, and tested for some functional properties. These chemical studies established that the active site of human milk BAL is located at serine-194, the N-glycosylation site is present at asparagine-187, the O-glycosylation region is in the 16 repeating units near the C-terminus, and the heparin binding domain is in the N-terminal region. We have also determined the location of disulfide bridges as Cys64-Cys80 and Cys246-Cys257. The cyanogen bromide cleavage and the partial sequencing of CNBr peptides also confirmed the location of methionines in the polypeptide chain as well as the deduced cDNA sequence of BAL.
...
PMID:Structure of human milk bile salt activated lipase. 198 41


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>