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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 ratio of weakly and strongly immobilized populations of
membrane-bound
maleimide spin label, the excimer to monomer fluorescence ratio of membrane-embedded pyrene, and
acetylcholinesterase
activity, were evaluated in bovine erythrocyte membrane preparations incubated at 37 degrees C. Oscillations were evident in the values obtained, and the periods of these oscillations were in the range of 1.3 to 1.6 h.
...
PMID:Oscillations in erythrocyte membrane preparations. 369 Nov 77
The distribution of
acetylcholinesterase
(
AChE
) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) molecular forms and their solubility characteristics were examined, using density gradient centrifugation, in various regions of the postmortem human CNS. Total
AChE
activity varied extensively (50-fold) among the regions investigated, being highest in the telencephalic subcortical structures (caudate nucleus and nucleus of Meynert); intermediate in the substantia nigra, cerebellum, and spinal cord; and least in the fornix and cortical regions (hippocampus and temporal and parietal cortex). Total BChE activity was, in contrast, much more evenly distributed, with only a threefold variation between the regions studied. Although the patterns of molecular forms of each enzyme were broadly similar among the different areas, regional variations in the distribution and abundance of the various forms of
AChE
were much greater than those of BChE. Thus, although the tetrameric G4 form of
AChE
constituted the majority of the total
AChE
activity in all regions examined, the ratio of the G4 form to the monomeric G1 form, the latter of which constituted the majority of the remaining activity, varied markedly, ranging from 21 in the caudate nucleus to 1.7 in the temporal cortex. In addition to the G4 and G1 forms of
AChE
, the dimeric G2 form was observed in the nucleus of Meynert and a fast-sedimenting (16S) species was found in samples of both the parietal cortex and spinal cord. In contrast, the G4 and G1 forms of BChE were the only molecular species observed in the different areas and the G4:G1 ratio varied from 3.3 in the substantia nigra to 0.9 in the temporal cortex. Regarding the solubility characteristics of the individual
AChE
and BChE molecular forms, the majority of the G4 form of
AChE
was extractable only in the presence of detergent, indicating a predominantly
membrane-bound
localization of this species. The smaller
AChE
forms (G1 and G2) and both the G1 and G4 forms of BChE were all relatively evenly distributed between soluble and
membrane-bound
species. These findings are discussed in relation to neurochemical and neuroanatomical, particularly cholinergic, features of the regions examined.
...
PMID:Molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase in the aged human central nervous system. 371 2
Differences are found between the
membrane-bound
and soluble acetylcholinesterases of human and bovine erythrocytes when the enzyme interacts with organophosphoric inhibitors in the presence of acetylc choline and galantamine, a reverse inhibitor of
acetylcholinesterase
. In most cases prevention of inhibition of the soluble enzyme activity necessitates a higher (2-3 times higher) concentration of the protecting agent than protection of the
membrane-bound
enzyme. Concentrations of acetylcholine and galantamine providing a 50% protection of the enzyme did not practically depend on the strength of the anticholinesterase action of organophosphoric inhibitors.
...
PMID:[Interaction of membrane-bound and solubilized acetylcholinesterase from human and bovine erythrocytes with organophosphorus inhibitors]. 372 30
Rat hippocampal minces were loaded with N-methyl-[3H]acetylcholine ([3H]ACh) in the presence of the 'poorly penetrating'
acetylcholinesterase
(
EC 3.1.1.7
, AChE) inhibitor echothiophate and the effect of the depolarizing agent veratridine determined on the subcellular storage and release of [3H]ACh and [3H]choline. Results indicated that veratridine stimulated the release of [3H]ACh from a crude vesicular fraction (P3) by a Ca2+-dependent process, while simultaneously accelerating the breakdown of cytosolic (S3) [3H]ACh. A portion of the [3H]choline derived from the hydrolyzed S3 [3H]ACh was donated to the P3 fraction for [3H]ACh formation and release. When the identical experiment was done using hippocampal minces from septal lesioned rats, veratridine did not stimulate either the Ca2+-dependent release of [3H]ACh or the hydrolysis of cytosolic [3H]ACh. Incubation of control hippocampal minces with paraoxon, an AChE inhibitor which can penetrate cholinergic nerve terminals more rapidly than echothiophate, prevented veratridine from stimulating the Ca2+-dependent release of [3H]ACh from the P3 fraction. Instead, it then stimulated the Ca2+-independent release of [3H]ACh from the S3 fraction. When minces were incubated with the choline O-acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.6, ChAT) inhibitor 4-(1-naphthyl)vinyl pyridine (NVP), veratridine was no longer able to stimulate the Ca2+-dependent release of labelled ACh either. Instead, veratridine stimulated the Ca2+-independent release of labelled ACh from the S3 fraction. NVP also abolished the veratridine-induced, Ca2+-dependent release of total ACh. Both paraoxon and NVP inhibited the reversible reaction of ionically bound ChAT prepared from rat brain when tested in vitro, yet paraoxon was much less potent than NVP, and was unable to inhibit this reaction at the low concentration which prevented the veratridine induced breakdown of S3 [3H]ACh during mince incubation. Veratridine depolarization of hippocampal minces stimulated the activity of a
membrane-bound
fraction of ChAT associated with the P3 fraction, but this fraction of ChAT did not become more sensitive to inhibition by paraoxon during tissue incubation. Veratridine depolarization of minces also increased the activity of
membrane-bound
AChE, but this enzyme was not inhibited by the low NVP concentration which prevented the veratridine-induced breakdown of S3 [3H]ACh. The veratridine-induced increase in
membrane-bound
ChAT activity was dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+ in the incubation medium.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Veratridine-induced breakdown of cytosolic acetylcholine in rat hippocampal minces: an intraterminal form of acetylcholinesterase or choline O-acetyltransferase? 376 8
Effect of 4,4-dyisotiocyanostilben-2,2-disulfonate (DIDS) and 1-ftor-2,4-dinitrobenzol (NDFB) on the rate of phosphate ion transport in erythrocytes, filtrability and thermal stability of erythrocytes and on the structural state of the erythrocyte membrane estimated by UV-fluorescence, PAAG--electrophoresis and measuring of the activity of
membrane-bound
acetylcholinesterase
(
AChE
) has been studied. Unpenetrating anion transport inhibitor DIDS is shown to induce structural modifications of bands 3 of protein and
AChE
, while DNFB penetrating the membrane causes a significant reorganization of many membrane proteins (including spectrin) resulting in changes of transport and mechanical properties of erythrocytes.
...
PMID:[Changes in the structural-functional state of erythrocyte membranes treated with anion transport inhibitors]. 377 56
The
membrane-bound
acetylcholinesterase
(
AChE
) from the electric organ of Torpedo marmorata was solubilized by Triton X-100 or by treatment with proteinase K and purified to apparent homogeneity by affinity chromatography. Although the two forms differed only slightly in their subunit molecular weight (66,000 and 65,000 daltons, respectively), considerable differences existed between native and digested detergent-soluble
AChE
. The native enzyme sedimented at 6.5 S in the presence of Triton X-100 and formed aggregates in the absence of detergent. The digested enzyme sedimented at 7.5 S in the absence and in the presence of detergent. In contrast to the detergent-solubilized
AChE
, the proteolytically derived form neither bound detergent nor required amphiphilic molecules for the expression of catalytic activity. This led to the conclusion that limited digestion of detergent-soluble
AChE
results in the removal of a small hydrophobic peptide which in vivo is responsible for anchoring the protein to the lipid bilayer.
...
PMID:Amphiphilic detergent-soluble acetylcholinesterase from Torpedo marmorata: characterization and conversion by proteolysis to a hydrophilic form. 388 May 82
The temperature-dependence of the catalytic activity of
acetylcholinesterase
(
AChE
) from rat erythrocyte-ghost membranes and from Torpedo electric-organ membranes was examined. In the case of rat erythrocyte
AChE
, a non-linear Arrhenius plot was observed both before and after solubilization by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C or by proteinase treatment. Similarly, no significant differences were observed in Arrhenius plots of Torpedo electric-organ
AChE
before or after solubilization. These results support our suggestion that the catalytic subunit of
AChE
does not penetrate deeply into the lipid bilayer of the plasma membrane and also suggest that care must be taken in ascribing break points in Arrhenius plots of
membrane-bound
enzymes to changes in their lipid environment.
...
PMID:Arrhenius plots of acetylcholinesterase activity in mammalian erythrocytes and in Torpedo electric organ. Effect of solubilization by proteinases and by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. 390 34
The secretion and cellular localization of the molecular forms of
acetylcholinesterase
(
AChE
) were studied in primary cultures of rat sympathetic neurons. When cultured under conditions favoring a noradrenergic phenotype, these neurons synthesized and secreted large quantities of the tetrameric G4, and the dodecameric A12 forms, and minor amounts of the G1 and G2 forms. When these neurons adopted the cholinergic phenotype, i.e., in the presence of muscle-conditioned medium, the development of the cellular A12 form was completely inhibited. These neurons secreted only globular, mainly G4,
AChE
. Both cellular and secreted A12
AChE
in adrenergic cultures aggregated at an ionic strength similar to that of the culture medium, raising the hypothesis that this form was associated with a polyanionic component of basal lamina. In noradrenergic neurons, 60-80% of the catalytic sites were exposed at the cell surface. In particular, 80% of G4 form, but only 60% of the A12 form, was external, demonstrating for the A12 form a sizeable intracellular pool. The hydrophobic character of the molecular forms was studied in relation to their cellular localization. As in muscle cells, most of the G4 form was
membrane-bound
. Whereas 76% of the cell surface A12 form was solubilized in the aqueous phase by high salt concentrations, only 50% of the intracellular A12 form was solubilized under these conditions. The rest of intracellular A12 could be solubilized by detergents and was thus either
membrane-bound
or entrapped in vesicles originating from, e.g., the Golgi apparatus.
...
PMID:Cellular localization of the molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase in primary cultures of rat sympathetic neurons and analysis of the secreted enzyme. 394 12
The hydrophobic,
membrane-bound
form of Torpedo
acetylcholinesterase
is specifically solubilized by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, suggesting that
acetylcholinesterase
is bound to the membrane via a direct and specific interaction with phosphatidylinositol (Futerman et al., Biochem. J. (1985) 226, 369-377). Here we demonstrate the presence of covalently bound inositol in the membrane-anchoring domain of purified Torpedo
acetylcholinesterase
. Upon removal of this domain, levels of inositol are reduced to only 15-20% of those found in the intact enzyme. The results presented strongly support our suggestion that phosphatidylinositol is indeed involved in anchoring
acetylcholinesterase
to the plasma membrane.
...
PMID:Identification of covalently bound inositol in the hydrophobic membrane-anchoring domain of Torpedo acetylcholinesterase. 400 81
The enzyme choline-O-acetyltransferase catalyses the biosynthesis of acetylcholine from acetyl coenzyme A and choline and is considered as one of the best markers for cholinergic nerve endings. The distribution of this enzymatic activity was analysed during the purification of plasma membranes of purely cholinergic nerve endings isolated from the electric organ of the fish Torpedo marmorata. This tissue, which receives a profuse and purely cholinergic innervation, can be considered as being a "giant" neuromuscular synapse. The isolated nerve endings (synaptosomes) were first osmotically disrupted and their plasma membranes isolated by equilibrium density centrifugation (discontinuous followed by continuous sucrose gradients). Choline acetyltransferase activity was found to exist in three forms: (1) a soluble form (the major one) present in the cytoplasm of the nerve endings, (2) a form which is ionically associated with membranes and which can be solubilized by washing exhaustively the membrane fraction with solutions of high ionic strength (0.5 M NaCl) and (iii) a form which is non-ionically bound to membranes and cannot be solubilized with high salt solution. The soluble and the non-ionically bound activities exhibited very similar affinities for choline (1.34 and 1.64 mM, respectively). The non-ionically membrane-associated form of choline acetyltransferase was found to "copurify" with the cholinergic synaptosomal plasma membranes of Torpedo, its specific activity being increased from 122 (crude fraction) to 475 (purified membrane fraction) nmol/h/mg protein. An enrichment was also observed for another cholinergic marker, the enzyme
acetylcholinesterase
, but not for the nicotinic receptor to acetylcholine, a marker for postsynaptic membranes. No choline acetyltransferase activity could be detected in preparations of synaptic vesicles that were highly purified from the electric organ. Also, the non-ionically associated form of choline acetyltransferase activity was hardly detectable (2.4 nmol/h/mg protein) in fractions enriched in axonal membranes prepared from the cholinergic electric nerves innervating the electric organ. The partition into soluble and
membrane-bound
activity was also analysed for choline acetyltransferase present in human placenta, a rich source for the enzyme but a non-innervated tissue. In this case the great majority of the enzyme appeared as soluble activity. Very low levels of non-ionically
membrane-bound
activity were found to be present in a crude membrane fraction from human placenta (2.8 nmol/h/mg protein).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Membrane-bound choline acetyltransferase in Torpedo electric organ: a marker for synaptosomal plasma membranes? 402 40
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