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

The horse provides an interesting model for study of the structure and function of the mammalian diaphragm. Multiple regions of diaphragm from seven adult horses were prepared for histochemistry, immunocytochemistry, myosin heavy chain electrophoresis, and native myosin electrophoresis. Two additional adults were dissected to demonstrate myofiber and central tendon morphology and stained for acetylcholinesterase to demonstrate motor endplates. All regions of the adult diaphragm were histochemically characterized by a preponderance of type I fibers with some type IIa fibers. Type IIb fibers were absent in all adult specimens. Myosin heavy chain electrophoresis supported the histochemical study: two isoform bands were present on SDS gels that comigrated at the same rate as rat type I and IIa myosin heavy chain isoforms. No isoform was determined to comigrate with rat type IIb heavy chain isoforms. Native myosin isoform analysis revealed two isoforms that comigrated with rat FM-4 and FM-3 (FM = fast myosin) and two isoforms that comigrated with rat SM-1 and SM-2 (SM = slow myosin) isoforms. In some samples, a third slow native myosin isoform was observed that comigrated at the same rate as the SM-3 of the equine biceps brachii muscle. This doublet (or "triplet") of slow isoforms is unique to some horse muscles compared with other adult animals studied. It is not known if these multiple slow native myosin isoforms confer some functional advantage to the equine muscles. The adult equine diaphragm also differs in its morphology by having a large central tendon compared to that in other mammals, and is predominantly slow in fiber type and myosin isoform composition.
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PMID:Morphological, histochemical, and myosin isoform analysis of the diaphragm of adult horses, Equus caballus. 817 13

Necator americanus (Nematoda: Strongyloidea), a human hookworm parasite, is known to release considerable amounts of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) [Pritchard, D. I., Leggett K. V., Rogan, M. T., McKean, P. G. & Brown, A. (1991) Necator americanus secretory acetylcholinesterase and its purification from excretory/secretory products by affinity chromatography, Parasite Immunol. 13, 187-199]. The present study deals with AChE activity recovered in sequential somatic extracts, and excretory/secretory products, of the adult stage of the parasite. 97% of AChE was extractable in low-salt and high-salt detergent-free buffers, and only 3% was solubilised by a further extraction in the presence of Triton X-100. AChE in all three extracts was affected by the AChE inhibitors eserine, bis(4-allyldimethylammoniumphenyl)pentan-3-one dibromide and edrophonium chloride, but was resistant to the effects of tetramonoisopropylpyrophosphortetramide, a butyrylcholinesterase inhibitor. Sucrose density centrifugation revealed that AChE in all somatic extracts (low-salt, high-salt and detergent) resolved almost exclusively as a single peak between 6.9-7.5 S, while excretory/secretory products resolved at 8.2 S. These values are all compatible with dimers of catalytic subunits and no evidence was found for the presence of higher oligomers such as asymmetric forms. The only sample to show a shift in sedimentation following the inclusion of detergent (Triton X-100, Brij 96) in the gradient was a component of the detergent-soluble extract, indicating the existence of a minor amphiphilic form. In low-salt-soluble and high-salt-soluble extracts, AChE was solubilised as a hydrophilic globular form, probably a dimeric G2. The analysis of diisopropylfluorophosphate-labelled extracts by SDS/PAGE, and unlabelled extracts by immunoblotting using a polyvalent antiserum to N. americanus AChE, indicated that the AChE isolated in each extract was biochemically and immunologically similar. The banding patterns obtained were comparable to that seen when purified AChE was analysed by SDS/PAGE and immunoblotted. This suggests that the basic catalytic subunit has a mass of 66-70 kDa with the active site being located in a 30-kDa domain. All experimental data indicate the existence of only one AChE class in Necator homologous to AChE of class B from Caenorhabditis elegans. The solubility characteristics and globular nature of this hookworm AChE suggest that its major function is as an excretory or secretory product. This again raises the question of the true biological function of this 'non-cholinergenic' nematode secretion.
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PMID:The molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase from Necator americanus (Nematoda), a hookworm parasite of the human intestine. 830 98

In developing a research on the cholinesterase (ChE) evolution in Invertebrata, this enzyme was studied in the unsegmented marine worm Sipunculus nudus. ChE activity was solubilized through three successive steps of extraction. These fractions are noted as low-salt (LSS), detergent (DS) and high-salt soluble (HSS) and represent 27%, 68% and 5% of total activity, respectively. LSS and DS ChE were purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography on edrophonium-Sepharose gel. Purification factors of 1700 (LSS) and 1090 (DS) were obtained. The small amount of HSS ChE prevented a similar purification and an extensive characterization. Based on SDS/PAGE and density-gradient centrifugation, both LSS and DS enzymes show a M(r) value of about 130,000 and are likely G2 globular dimers of a 67,000 subunit. Moreover, LSS ChE seems to be an amphiphilic form including a hydrophobic domain, while DS ChE is probably linked to the cell membrane by a phosphatidylinositol anchor. Both LSS and DS enzymes hydrolyze at the highest rate propionylthiocholine. However, they also show a fairly high catalytic efficiency with other thiocholine esters as substrates, thus suggesting a wide and little-specialized conformation of the active site. Based on immunological cross-reactivity trials, LSS and DS ChE from S. nudus show a reduced structural affinity with a molluscan (Murex brandaris) enzyme. HSS ChE, an acetylcholinesterase, is also solubilized by heparin, like typical vertebrate HSS asymmetric enzymes. However, it lacks fast-sedimenting forms and an enzyme-anchoring collagenous structure.
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PMID:Dimeric forms of cholinesterase in Sipunculus nudus. 834 95

Two affected individuals of the Swedish family with CDA, type III, in which the disease is transmitted as an autosomal dominant character, were studied. Both cases displayed features hitherto undescribed in this family but described in patients with CDA, type III, in whom the inheritance may have been as an autosomal recessive character. Such features were: (a) haemosiderinuria, (b) grossly disorganised erythroblast nuclei, (c) differences in the ultrastructural appearances of individual nuclei within the same multinucleate erythroblast and (d) intraerythroblastic inclusions resembling precipitated globin chains. In both cases the giant mononucleate erythroblasts and the multinucleate erythroblasts had total DNA contents up to 28c (1c = haploid DNA content) and 48c respectively, and some DNA synthesising bi- and multinucleate erythroblasts contained one or more nuclei which were unlabelled with 3H-thymidine. These findings are similar to those in patients with the autosomal recessive type of disease. Thus no major phenotypic differences are yet apparent between cases of CDA, type III, with different patterns of inheritance. Analysis of the surface erythrocyte proteins of the 2 Swedish CDA, type III, patients with monoclonal antibodies recognising Band 3, glycophorins A, B, C and D, Rh, CD44, CD47, CD55, CD58, CD59, Lutheran, Kell, LW and acetylcholinesterase did not reveal any gross abnormality of expression of these proteins. A slightly altered expression of blood group antigens A and H was revealed by the lectins Dolichos biflorus and Ulex europaeus and the Mr of Band 3 as judged by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was also slightly reduced, suggesting that there may be minor alterations in the degree of N-glycosylation of some red cell membrane constituents.
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PMID:Observations on two members of the Swedish family with congenital dyserythropoietic anaemia, type III. 850 Jun 3

PC12 cells can differentiate into neuron-like cells after treatment with either nerve growth factor (NGF) or transduction with a retrovirus which expresses the K-ras oncogene. The concomitant treatment of NGF plus ras differentiates PC12 cells further than either agent alone with respect to neurite outgrowth, acetylcholinesterase levels, and most strikingly, the number of synaptic vesicle (SV) clusters. These SV clusters in PC12 cell neurites closely resemble those in the presynaptic terminals of neurons. Such SV clusters have not been described in cell lines previously. The SV clusters from all three differentiated groups (NGF, ras, and NGF plus ras) were similar in size, shape, and configuration, except that the ones in the doubly treated group occur in higher frequency and have more vesicles. The synaptic nature of these vesicle clusters was demonstrated by their regulated depletion after potassium stimulation. Furthermore, these vesicle clusters stained positively for two SV-associated proteins, synapsin I and synaptophysin, by EM immunocytochemistry (ICC). Such SV clusters in a cell line are very useful for characterizing the regulated release of SVs and the distribution of SV-related antigens in intact cells. Analysis by SDS-gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting indicated that synapsin I levels are higher in all three differentiated groups compared to untreated cells; whereas synaptophysin levels are lower in cells exposed to NGF alone or with NGF and ras double treatment. Possible convergence and/or divergence on the mechanisms of NGF and ras differentiation in PC12 cells are discussed.
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PMID:Characterization of synaptic vesicles and related neuronal features in nerve growth factor and ras oncogene differentiated PC12 cells. 858

Mammalian brain acetylcholinesterase (AChE; EC 3.1.1.7) is membrane-bound through a structural subunit of about 20 kDa. So far little is known about this anchor because it is only detectable after hydrophobic labelling. In the present study we demonstrate that the two bands migrating around 20 kDa on SDS-PAGE derive from the same protein containing the same N-terminal amino acid sequence. The difference in their mobility is due to different N-glycosidation. Radioalkylation of cysteine residues reveals that the anchor contains just the two cysteine residues involved in binding the catalytic subunits.
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PMID:The membrane anchor of mammalian brain acetylcholinesterase consists of a single glycosylated protein of 22 kDa. 860 22

Three distinct acetylcholinesterases were detected in the annelid oligochaete Dendrobaena veneta. Two enzymes (alpha, beta), copurified from a Triton-X-100-soluble extract of whole animals by affinity (edrophonium-Sepharose) chromatography, were separately eluted from a Sephadex G-200 column. Gel-filtration chromatography, sedimentation analysis and SDS/PAGE showed the alpha and beta forms to be a globular dimer (110 kDa, 7.0 S) and a hydrophilic monomer (58 kDa, 5.0 S) respectively, both weakly linked to the cell membrane. The third form (gamma), also purified to homogeneity by slower filtration through an edrophonium-Sepharose matrix, proved to be an amphiphilic globular dimer (133 kDa, 7.0 S) with a phosphatidylinositol anchor giving cell membrane insertion, detergent (Triton X-100, Brij 96) interaction and self-aggregation. The alpha acetylcholinesterase showed a fairly low substrate specificity: the beta form hydrolyzed propionylthiocholine at the highest rate and was inactive on butyrylthiocholine; the gamma acetylcholinesterase, showing a marked active-site specificity with differently sized substrates, was likely functional in cholinergic synapses. Studies with inhibitors showed incomplete inhibition of all three acetylcholinesterase by 1 mM eserine and different sensitivity for edrophonium or procainamide. The alpha and beta forms, sensitive to 1,5-bis(4-allyldimethylammoniumphenyl)-pentan-3-one dibromide, were unaffected by tetra(monoisopropyl)-pyrophosphortetramide, while both these agents inhibited the gamma enzyme. All three forms showed excess-substrate inhibition by acetylthiocholine. Enzyme activity was histochemically localized in the nerve ring and its minor branches. Monomeric acetylcholinesterase (beta) is likely the only form present in the ganglionic glial framework.
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PMID:Acetylcholinesterase in Dendrobaena veneta (Oligochaeta: Opisthopora) is present with forms sensitive and insensitive to phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C. Biochemical characterization and histochemical localization in the nervous system. 868 69

To identify pretransplant factors that are influencing survival after orthotopic liver transplantation a Cox proportional hazards regression model was applied to 118 children with chronic terminal liver failure transplanted at Medical School Hannover during the period of 1978 to 1994. The response variable was survival, as covariates a total of 19 pretransplant variables were entered--i.e. age, diagnosis (biliary cirrhosis, metabolic cirrhosis, postnecrotic cirrhosis, cryptogenetic cirrhosis) sex, laparotomy prior to OLT, height, weight, standard deviation scores for height and weight, date of first OLT, serum alanine aminotransferase, asparagine aminotransferase, albumin, total bilirubin, cholinesterase activity, glomerular filtration rate, and prothrombin time. Significant independent predictors of survival after OLT were bilirubin (P=0.0024), SDS for weight (P=0.034), and albumin (P=0.039). In a subsequent discriminant analysis cut off points for these variables could be identified--i.e., bilirubin >340 micromol/L, SDS for weight <-2.2 and albumin < 33 g/L. Patients with one or more of these risk factors were grouped as urgent indication group (n=76) and those with no risk factor as elective indication group (n=42). Comparing the posttransplantation survival in these groups there is a statistically significant difference at 1 year (57% vs. 90.5%) and 4 years (49% vs. 90.5%) after OLT (P=0.0001, log rank test). It is concluded that the risk of OLT is much higher if liver function is very poor. Optimal nutritional support prior to transplantation is mandatory to optimise the clinical status of the children and to improve the results of OLT.
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PMID:Liver transplantation in children with chronic end stage liver disease: factors influencing survival after transplantation. 890 Mar 4

p-dimethylamino (A) and p-dibutylamino (B) benzenediazonium salts, previously characterized as efficient labels of membrane-bound and solubilized muscarinic receptor sites, are endowed with overall interesting photochemical and alkylating properties that allow their use as structural probes of the muscarinic ligand binding domain to be considered. Under reversible binding conditions, these antagonists display no binding selectivity towards the 5 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) subtypes. They were used here, in a tritiated form, as photoaffinity labels of purified muscarinic receptors from porcine striatum, and their irreversible binding was assessed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis. When irradiated under energy transfer conditions, [3H]A and [3H]B were both found to covalently label purified muscarinic receptor sites in a light-dependent and atropine-protectable manner. The electrophoretic migration properties of the alkylated sites were similar to those of [3H]propylbenzilylcholine mustard (PrBCM)-labeled mAChRs. Specific radioactive incorporation showed a clear dependency on probe concentration. Labeling efficiency was rather high, with up to 30% and even 60% of the receptor population being photolabeled by [3H]A and [3H]B, respectively. These two photoactivatable ligands have proven to be powerful tools for the structural analysis of other cholinergic targets (acetylcholinesterase and the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor) by allowing the characterization of a number of different residues belonging to their acetylcholine-binding domain. Altogether, these results reinforce the interest of our site-directed labeling approach because [3H]A- and [3H]B-alkylated mAChRs may now be considered as suitable materials to investigate the muscarinic receptor-binding pocket through peptide mapping, sequence analyses, and identification of radiolabeled amino acid residues.
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PMID:Covalent labeling of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors by tritiated aryldiazonium photoprobes. 910 1

We analyzed 45 batches of venom from 20 different species belonging to 11 genera from the 3 main families of venomous snakes (Elapidae, Viperidae and Crotalidae). We found high acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in all venoms from Elapidae, except in those from the Dendroaspis genus. AChE was particularly abundant in Bungarus venoms which contain up to 8 mg of enzyme per gram of dried venom. We could not detect acetylcholinesterase activity in any batch of venom from Viperidae or Crotalidae. Titration of active sites with an organophosphorous agent (MPT) revealed that the AChE of all venoms have similar turnovers (6000 to 8000 s(-1)) which are clearly higher than those of Torpedo and mammalian enzymes but lower than that of Electrophorus. AChEs from the venom of elapid snakes of the Bungarus, Naja, Ophiophagus and Haemacatus genera were purified by affinity chromatography. SDS-PAGE analysis and sucrose gradient centrifugation demonstrated that AChE is exclusively present as a nonamphiphilic monomer. These enzymes are true AChEs, hydrolyzing acetylthiocholine faster than propionylthiocholine and butyrylthiocholine and exhibiting excess substrate inhibition. Twenty-seven different monoclonal antibodies directed against AChE from Bungarus fasciatus venom were raised in mice. Half of them recognized exclusively the Bungarus enzyme while the others cross-reacted with AChEs from other venoms. Polyspecific mAbs were used to demonstrate that venoms from Dendroaspis, which contain the AChE inhibitor fasciculin but lack AChE activity, were also devoid of immunoreactive AChE protein. AChE inhibitors acting at the active site (edrophonium, tacrine) and at the peripheral site (propidium, fasciculin), as well as bis-quaternary ligands (BW284C51, decamethonium), were tested against the venom AChEs from 11 different species. All enzymes had a very similar pattern of reactivity with regard to the different inhibitors, with the exception of fasciculin. AChEs from Naja and Haemacatus venoms were relatively insensitive to fasciculin inhibition (IC50 >> 10(-6) M), while Bungarus (IC50 approximately 10(-8) M) and especially Ophiophagus (IC50 < 10(-10) M) AChEs were inhibited very efficiently. Ophiophagus and Bungarus AChEs were also efficiently inhibited by a monoclonal antibody (Elec-410) previously described as a specific ligand for the Electrophorus electricus peripheral site. Taken together, these results show that the venoms of most Elapidae snakes contain large amounts of a highly active non-amphiphilic monomeric AChE. All snake venom AChEs show strong immunological similarities and possess very similar enzymatic properties. However, they present quite different sensitivity to peripheral site inhibitors, fasciculin and the monoclonal antibody Elec-410.
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PMID:Acetylcholinesterases from Elapidae snake venoms: biochemical, immunological and enzymatic characterization. 918 46


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