Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.1.8 (cholinesterase)
12,691 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Normal muscle spindles of human skeletal muscle were studied histochemically. 1) Four histochemical types of intrafusal muscle fibers were classified by ATPase stain: Bag I fiber, Bag II fiber, Chain I fiber and Chain II fiber. Moreover, two types of nuclear bag fibers were classified by NADH Tetrazolium Reductase stain and PAS stain: Bag I fiber and Bag II fiber. 2) Three kinds of fusimotor endings were verified by the cholinesterase technic: en plaque, en grappe and diffuse endings. 3) Two kinds of fusisensory endings were verified by NADH TR stain and also electron-microscopically: primary and secondary sensory endings.
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PMID:Histochemical study of normal human muscle spindle. Histochemical classification of intrafusal muscle fibers and intrafusal nerve endings. 7 4

We have described cholinergic fibres which cross the tunnel to three levels of the cells on the opposite side--from the level of the efferent network to the base of a plaque at the level of the nucleus of the first Deiters cell. These fibres are dependent upon the OCB being intact. The same is true for those fibres seen within the Hensen cell region. However, the cholinesterase-staining fine fibres travelling along the floor of the tunnel to the base of the plaque are independent of the integrity of the OCB.
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PMID:Relationship of centrifugal fibres to 'supporting' cells. 9 Apr 98

Cholinesterase activity was present in the atheromatous plaque of the rabbit's atherosclerotic aorta. Cholinesterase activity was significantly increased in rat fibroblast cultures grown in the presence of hypercholesterolemic serum. Cholesterol ester synthesis in these cultures was inhibited by neostigmine, a cholinesterase inhibitor.
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PMID:Cholinesterase in the atherosclerotic intima and in fibroblast cultures. 44 25

Necropsy brain tissue from normal (control) patients and patients with depression and dementia was examined for activities of various cholinergic components, and these related to the degree of senile plaque formation and extent of intellectual impairment. Choline acetyltransferase and acetylcholinesterase activities decreased significantly as the mean plaque count rose, and in depressed and demented subjects the reduction in choline acetyltransferase activity correlated with the extent of intellectual impairment as measured by a memory information test; muscarinic cholinergic receptor binding activity remained unchanged with increasing senile plaque formation but butyrylcholinesterase activity increased. The results suggest a close relation between changes in the cholinergic system and Alzheimer's dementia, but the precise role of the system in this disease remains to be elucidated.
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PMID:Correlation of cholinergic abnormalities with senile plaques and mental test scores in senile dementia. 71 62

Following a previous comparison of the peroneus longus muscle of the quail and the starling, the present paper deals with a comparative study of this muscle in two birds of the order Gallinaceae, the quail and the bantam, bearing in mind certain data found in the starling. The study deals with the types of muscle fibres, their frequency in various parts of the muscle, their lipid content and their innervation. In the quail, two types of fibres are found, with a low and high lipid content respectively, while the bantam and starling have also a third, intermediate type. These intermediate fibres have a characteristically intermediate lipid content, peripherally situated nuclei and areas with a myofibrillar structure. The proportion of the two of three types of fibres varies with the species and in the distal and proximal parts of the muscle. The innervation of the peroneus longus muscle is different in the three species. In the quail, the two types of fibres have only one arboriform motor end-plate per fibre. In the bantam, the two types of homologous fibres also have only one motor end-plate, but with fewer arborifications. The intermediate fibre type, on the other hand, is innervated by several small nerve endings for each muscle fibre. This type of multiple innervation is also found in the starling. The peroneus longus muscle is thus functionally different in the two birds of the order Gallinaceae, whereas the rapid and slow system of innervation is found in the bantam and the starling. In the quail and the bantam, there is a strong positive correlation between the diameter of the muscle fibre and the longitudinal extent of the motor end-plate. This correlation is not marked in the starling. The characteristics of the innervation revealed by the cholinesterase activity concentrated in the synaptic grooves were confirmed by a direct study of the nerve fibres, using the Bielschowsky-Gros method. In the quail only 'en plaque' endings are found, while in the bantam and the starling both 'en plaque' and 'en grappe' endings are present. A parallel is drawn between the differences in function of the peroneus longus muscle and the characteristic features of its histology and innervation in the three species.
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PMID:[A histochemical and biometric comparison of the long peroneal muscle and its innervation in Gallus gallus and Coturnix c. japonica]. 118 92

The pattern of molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase (AChE, EC 3.1.1.7) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE, EC 3.1.1.8) separated by density gradient centrifugation was investigated in the brain and cerebrospinal fluid in Alzheimer's disease (AD), in human embryonic brain and in rat brain after experimental cholinergic deafferentation of the cerebral cortex. While a selective loss of the AChE G4 form was a rather constant finding in AD, a small but significant increase of G1 for both AChE and BChE was found in the most severely affected cases. Both in normal human brain and in AD a significant relationship could be established between the AChE G4/G1 ratio in different brain regions and the activity of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT). A similar decrease of the AChE G4 form as observed in AD can be induced in rat by experimental cholinergic deafferentation of the cerebral cortex. The increase in G1 of both AChE and BChE in different brain regions in AD is quantitatively related to the local density of neuritic plaques which are histochemically reactive for both enzymes. In human embryonic brain, a high abundance of G1 and a low G4/G1 ratio for both AChE and BChE was found resembling the pattern observed in AD. Furthermore, both in embryonic brain and in AD AChE shows no substrate inhibition which is a constant feature of the enzyme in the adult human brain. It is, therefore, concluded that the degeneration of the cholinergic cortical afferentation in AD as reflected by a decrease of AChE G4 is accompanied by the process of a neuritic sprouting response involved in plaque formation which is probably associated with the expression of a developmental form of the enzyme.
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PMID:Changes in acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase in Alzheimer's disease resemble embryonic development--a study of molecular forms. 130 64

The nature of the putative autoantigen in Graves' ophthalmopathy (Go) remains an enigma but the sequence similarity between thyroglobulin (Tg) and acetylcholinesterase (ACHE) provides a rationale for epitopes which are common to the thyroid gland and the eye orbit. In an attempt to define the shared epitope, we have screened a lambda gt 11 human thyroid cDNA library using a polyclonal antibody to Torpedo ACHE and isolated two clones, which upon sequencing, were shown to contain Tg segments, corresponding to portions of the C terminal part of the molecule which has a high similarity with ACHE. Having demonstrated the existence of an epitope common to Tg and ACHE, the clones have been further tested and found to be positive in lysis plaque assays with 1/10 sera from patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT), 8/8 from patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy and 0/8 normal sera. We have investigated the physiological significance of this common epitope by in situ immunolocalization studies in which the polyclonal antibody to Torpedo ACHE (which was used for screening the library) and immunoglobulins (Igs) from 6 Go patients tested were shown to bind to end plate regions of human foetal muscle fibres which were concurrently shown to be rich in cholinesterase activity: Igs from 3 normal individuals and 2 patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis did not bind. The results demonstrate and characterize an epitope which is common to Tg and ACHE and show that Go patients Igs contain antibodies which bind to muscle end plates rich in cholinesterase. The significance of these findings to the pathogenesis of Go is discussed.
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PMID:Definition, at the molecular level, of a thyroglobulin-acetylcholinesterase shared epitope: study of its pathophysiological significance in patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy. 248 81

The deltoid and gluteus maximus of the desert rat and the albino rat were examined histochemically for the distribution of succinic dehydrogenase (SDH) and cholinesterase (ChE). SDH activity showed that the deltoid and gluteus maximus muscles of the two animals consisted of three types of muscle fibres, with a predominance of muscle fibres that have higher SDH activity in both the deltoid and gluteus maximus muscles of the desert rat than in the albino rat. The mean diameter of all muscle fibres in the deltoid and gluteus maximus muscles and their ratios to the average body weight were determined in both animals. The desert rat showed a statistically significant increase in those ratios compared with the corresponding ratios for the albino rat. ChE activity showed that the deltoid and gluteus maximus muscles are richly innervated by intensely positive ChE motor end-plates with a predominance of plaque-like terminals. The mean diameters of the end-plates and the ratios of these diameters to the diameter of the muscle fibres together with their ratios to the body weight were determined. A correlation between these values and the histological findings is proposed.
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PMID:Succinic dehydrogenase and cholinesterase activities in the skeletal muscles of the desert rat and the albino rat. 275 Apr 58

Selective cholinesterase inhibitors such as BW284C51 and iso-OMPA showed that the plaques and tangles of Alzheimer's disease contain acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase activity. In comparison to the cholinesterases of the normal brain, the plaque and tangle-bound cholinesterases in Alzheimer's disease display major shifts in optimum pH and inhibitor sensitivity.
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PMID:Special properties of cholinesterases in the cerebral cortex of Alzheimer's disease. 279 Apr 72

The histochemical distribution of cholinesterases in the cerebral cortex and their response to cholinesterase inhibitors such as physostigmine and tetrahydroaminoacridine (THA) were investigated in brains from patients with Alzheimer's disease and control subjects. In the temporal neocortex of the control subjects, most of the cholinesterase activity was located within axons and cell bodies belonging to cholinergic pathways. In keeping with their well-known cholinomimetic effects, physostigmine and THA effectively inhibited this cholinesterase activity. Cholinesterase-containing normal axons (and in some cases cells) were severely depleted in the cerebral cortex of patients with Alzheimer's disease. Although the cerebral cortex of these patients continued to display abundant cholinesterase activity, the location of this enzyme was largely shifted to the neuritic plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. In fact, the majority of these pathological structures demonstrated intense acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase activities. Physostigmine and THA were potent inhibitors of these plaque- and tangle-bound cholinesterases as well. In patients with Alzheimer's disease, cholinesterase inhibitors would therefore appear to have a major and widespread effect directly upon the enzymatic activity of plaques and tangles. Consequently, the clinical effects of anticholinesterases in Alzheimer's disease may be based on mechanisms that are different from those that apply to the normal brain.
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PMID:Anatomy of cholinesterase inhibition in Alzheimer's disease: effect of physostigmine and tetrahydroaminoacridine on plaques and tangles. 343 78


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