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Query: EC:3.1.1.8 (
cholinesterase
)
12,691
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chlorpyrifos (CPF), a commonly used
cholinesterase
-inhibiting insecticide, is lethal at much lower doses to young animals than adults. To explain this higher sensitivity in younger animals, we hypothesized that young rats have less chlorpyrifos-oxonase (CPFOase) activity than adults. To test this hypothesis, CPFOase activity was measured in the brain, plasma, and liver of male, postnatal day 4 (PND4) and adult (PND90) Long-Evans rats. CPFOase is biochemically defined as a Ca(2+)-dependent
A-esterase
that hydrolyzes chlorpyrifos-oxon (CPFO), the active metabolite of CPE. No brain CPFOase activity was detected at either age. Plasma and liver CPFOase activities were markedly lower at PND4 compared to adult: PND4 plasma and liver CPFOase activities were 1/11 and 1/2 the adult plasma and liver activities, respectively. Because the Km of CPFOase activity was high (i.e., 210-380 microM), it was important to determine if this CPFOase activity could hydrolyze physiologically relevant concentrations (i.e., nM to low microM) of CPFO. This was accomplished by comparing the shifts in the tissue acetylcholinesterase (AChE) IC50 for CPFO in the presence or absence of CPFOase activity. One would expect an increase in the "apparent" IC50 if CPFOase hydrolyzes substantial amounts of CPFO during the 30 minutes the tissue is preincubated with the CPFO. In the adult, both plasma and liver AChE apparent IC50 values were higher in the presence of CPFOase activity, suggesting that the CPFOase in those tissues was capable of hydrolyzing physiologically relevant concentrations of CPFO within 30 minutes. In young animals, however, there was less of a shift in the IC50 curves compared to the adult, confirming that the young animal has less capacity than the adult to detoxify physiologically relevant concentrations of CPFO via CPFOase.
...
PMID:Maturational differences in chlorpyrifos-oxonase activity may contribute to age-related sensitivity to chlorpyrifos. 926 78
1. Paraoxon concentration was estimated by means of inhibition kinetics observed with electric eel acetylcholinesterase (AChE) which was determined by a modified Ellman procedure. In human plasma, paraoxon was stabilized by inactivation of
paraoxonase
with EDTA and aluminon and by inhibition of
butyrylcholinesterase
with ethopropazine. Paraoxon (1-50 ng) was recovered at 86+/-1.7% (mean+/-s.e.m.) in ether extracts from 0.5 ml samples of spiked stabilized plasma. It could be stored without loss at - 20 degrees C for at least 1 month. 2. The enzyme-based assay was applied to follow the paraoxon plasma concentrations in three suicidal patients with severe parathion poisoning. In poisoning with excessive doses and initial paraoxon concentrations above 500 nM, therapeutic obidoxime concentrations of approximately 10 microM failed to essentially reactivate erythrocyte AChE in vivo, while reactivatability ex vivo was nearly complete. With the plasma concentrations of paraoxon dropping below 100 nM, however, reactivation by obidoxime became significant. Unexpectedly, paraoxon levels occasionally reincreased during treatment and resulted in re-inhibition of AChE, bearing some resemblance to the Intermediate Syndrome. 3. The paraoxon concentrations measured fitted satisfactorily the values calculated from the kinetic constants previously obtained for AChE inhibition and obidoxime-induced reactivation in vitro. This indicates that diethylphosphoryloxime formation during obidoxime-induced reactivation does not markedly contribute to the re-inhibition of AChE as observed in vitro.
...
PMID:Enzyme-based assay for quantification of paraoxon in blood of parathion poisoned patients. 998 68
Young rats are more sensitive than adults to a single oral dose of chlorpyrifos, an organophosphorus pesticide. A direct comparison of chlorpyrifos effects in young (postnatal day 17; PND17), adolescent (PND27), and adult (70 days) Long-Evans rats was conducted to determine quantitative and possibly qualitative differences in sensitivity in terms of behavioral changes and
cholinesterase
(ChE; total
cholinesterase
activity) inhibition at these three ages. Male and female rats were administered chlorpyrifos orally at one of two doses (PND17, 5 or 20 mg/kg; PND27, 20 or 50 mg/kg; adult, 20 or 80 mg/kg) and tested at either 3.5 or 6.5 h after dosing. Behavioral testing included observational evaluations and measurements of motor activity and was followed immediately by tissue collection for ChE determination in brain and blood. For both behavioral changes and ChE inhibition, peak effects occurred at 3.5 h in adult male and PND27 rats (both sexes) and at 6.5 h in adult female and PND17 rats (both sexes). Comparisons of the 20 mg/kg dose across ages showed generally less ChE inhibition and fewer behavioral effects with increasing age, except that the adult females were similar to the PND27 rats. The high dose used for each age group produced similar brain ChE inhibition (80-90%) and generally similar behavioral effects. Interestingly, a few end-points in the young rats were less affected than in adults at this level of ChE inhibition. The degree of ChE inhibition in the brain more closely paralleled the blood inhibition in the younger rats, compared to the adults. Carboxylesterase (CaE) and
A-esterase
are known to play an important role in the detoxification of organophosphates and may be partially responsible for these sensitivity differences. Liver and plasma CaE and
A-esterase
activities were measured in untreated male rats on PND1, 4, 7, 12, 17, and 21 and in adults of both sexes (82-92 days old). Preweanling rats had considerably less activity of both enzymes, and adult females had less liver CaE activity than males. These differences in detoxifying enzymes correlate with the age-related differences in behavioral and biochemical effects, as well as the gender differences seen in adult rats, and thus may be a major influence on the differential sensitivity to chlorpyrifos.
...
PMID:Age- and gender-related differences in sensitivity to chlorpyrifos in the rat reflect developmental profiles of esterase activities. 1004 24
Previously Haley et al. described six possible syndromes identified by factor analysis of symptoms in Gulf War veterans and demonstrated that veterans with these symptom complexes were more neurologically impaired than age-sex-education-matched well controls. They also uncovered strong associations (relative risks 4-8) suggesting that these symptom complexes were related to wartime exposure to combinations of organophosphate pesticides, chemical nerve agents, high concentration DEET insect repellant, and symptoms of advanced acute toxicity after taking pyridostigmine. Here we have shown that compared to controls, ill veterans with the neurologic symptom complexes were more likely to have the R allele (heterozygous QR or homozygous R) than to be homozygous Q for the paraoxonase/arylesterase 1 (PON1) gene. Moreover, low activity of the PON1 type Q (Gln192, formerly designated type A) arylesterase allozyme distinguished ill veterans from controls better than just the PON1 genotype or the activity levels of the type R (Arg192, formerly designated type B) arylesterase allozyme, total arylesterase, total
paraoxonase
, or
butyrylcholinesterase
. A history of advanced acute toxicity after taking pyridostigmine was also correlated with low PON1 type Q arylesterase activity. Type Q is the allozyme of paraoxonase/arylesterase that most efficiently hydrolyzes several organophosphates including sarin, soman, and diazinon. These findings further support the proposal that neurologic symptoms in some Gulf War veterans were caused by environmental chemical exposures.
...
PMID:Association of low PON1 type Q (type A) arylesterase activity with neurologic symptom complexes in Gulf War veterans. 1037 7
Egasyn is an accessory protein of beta-glucuronidase (beta-G) in the liver microsomes. Liver microsomal beta-G is stabilized within the luminal site of the microsomal vesicles by complexation with egasyn which is one of the carboxylesterase isozymes. We investigated the effects of organophosphorus compounds (OPs) such as insecticides on the dissociation of egasyn-beta-glucuronidase (EG) complex. The EG complex was easily dissociated by administration of OPs, i.e. fenitrothion, EPN, phenthionate, and bis-beta-nitrophenyl phosphate (BNPP), and resulting beta-G dissociated was released into blood, leading to the rapid and transient increase of plasma beta-G level with a concomitant decrease of liver microsomal beta-G level. In a case of phenthionate treatment, less increase in plasma beta-G level was observed, as compared with those of other OPs. This may be explained by the fact that phenthionate was easily hydrolyzed by carboxylesterase. Similarly, carbamate insecticides such as carbaryl caused rapid increase of plasma beta-G level. In contrast, no significant increase of plasma beta-G level was observed when pyrethroid insecticides were administered to rats. This is due to the fact that pyrethroids such as phenthrin and allethrin were easily hydrolyzed by
A-esterase
as well as carboxylesterase. On the other hand, addition of OPs to the incubation mixture containing liver microsomes caused the release of beta-G from microsomes to the medium. From these in vivo and in vitro data, it is concluded that increase of the plasma beta-G level after OP administration is much more sensitive biomarker than
cholinesterase
inhibition to acute intoxication of OPs and carbamates.
...
PMID:Toxicological significance in the cleavage of esterase-beta-glucuronidase complex in liver microsomes by organophosphorus compounds. 1042 85
1. In vitro detoxification of the organophosphate (OP) insecticides paraoxon, chlorpyrifos-oxon and malaoxon has been investigated in human serum. 2. Specific
A-esterase
activity to each OP substrate was measured in the serum of 100 individuals using established spectrophotometric methods for
paraoxonase
and chlorpyrifos-oxonase and a novel assay for malaoxonase activity. 3. Dose-effect inhibition of serum
cholinesterase
by the three OPs was measured in pooled human serum. Inhibition of calcium dependent A-esterases by addition of EDTA resulted in increased inhibition of
cholinesterase
at a given OP concentration. 4. Data from both the direct spectrophotometric measurement of
A-esterase
activity and inhibition of serum
cholinesterase
in the presence and absence of
A-esterase
activity indicated that human serum
A-esterase
catalysed detoxification of chlorpyrifos-oxon> paraoxon> malaoxon. Our data also confirms the wide variation in potency to inhibit
cholinesterase
between the three OPs. 5. Malaoxonase activity in human serum does not appear to be polymorphic, however, there is large inter-individual variation as has been previously found for other A-esterases. 6. This study has demonstrated two approaches to investigate the inter-individual variation towards specific OPs and the relative ability of human serum
A-esterase
to detoxify specific OP compounds.
...
PMID:Detoxification of organophosphates by A-esterases in human serum. 1060 89
The potential of obidoxime and other pyridinium-4-aldoximes to reactivate dimethyl- and diethylphosphorylated cholinesterases is markedly restricted by the inevitable formation of rather stable phosphoryl oximes (POXs) with high anticholinesterase activity. This effect is hardly seen with very dilute enzyme preparations, but becomes significant at physiological enzyme concentrations. Human plasma with the
butyrylcholinesterase
irreversibly blocked by soman was able to stimulate obidoxime-induced reactivation of concentrated erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase (Ery-AChE) to the same extent as was observed with a dilute preparation, suggesting phosphoryl oxime-destroying capacity. The inactivating factor, which was tentatively termed POX-hydrolase, had (1) a molecular weight of >100 kDa; (2) required Ca2+ , which could not be substituted by Zn2+ or Mg2+; and (3) lost its catalytic activity reversibly in the presence of ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid (EDTA). The enzyme activity varied widely (20-fold) among different subjects and did not follow the activity pattern of human serum paraoxonase (PON1). Rabbit plasma with its particularly high
paraoxonase
content showed only weak POX-hydrolase activity. These data suggest POX-hydrolase to be a different entity. POX-hydrolase was most active with the putative phosphoryl-obidoxime from paraoxon-ethyl, less with the product from paraoxon-methyl and least with that from diisopropylfluorophosphate. The analogue TMB-4 reacted similarly to obidoxime. The putative phosphonyl oximes arising by the reaction of obidoxime with nerve agents were apparently not cleaved. The variation in POX-hydrolase activity may additionally contribute to the variable response to oxime therapy in patients with organophosphate insecticide poisoning.
...
PMID:The phosphoryl oxime-destroying activity of human plasma. 1081 64
Fluroxypyr methyl ester (FPM) and the herbicide fluroxypyr methylheptyl ester (FPMH) are completely hydrolyzed during penetration through human and rat skin in vitro to the acid metabolite, fluroxypyr (FP) (). This article presents additional studies to determine the enzyme kinetics (K(m) and V(max)) of this ester hydrolysis, using crude rat whole-skin homogenate. Both FPM and FPMH were extensively metabolized in rat skin homogenates to the acid metabolite, FP. In no instance were any other metabolites detected. FPM was essentially hydrolyzed completely within 1 h. In FPMH incubations, there was still parent ester present after 24 h at all concentrations tested. The kinetics of hydrolysis of the two esters were different: V(max) was approximately 3-fold greater for FPM than FPMH (1400 and 490 micromol FP/min/g of tissue, respectively); however, K(m) values were very similar, 251 and 256 microM, respectively. Preliminary inhibitory studies suggest that FPM and FPMH are hydrolyzed by a carboxylesterase, because this reaction was inhibited by bis-p-nitrophenyl phosphate. Mercuric chloride (an inhibitor of
A-esterase
and arylesterase) and eserine (a
cholinesterase
inhibitor) had no inhibitory effect on the hydrolysis of FPM or FPMH. Taken together with the data presented by, it can be concluded that no parent ester will pass through the skin in vivo, only the metabolite, FP. Therefore, first pass metabolism will be complete before these compounds reach the systemic circulation.
...
PMID:Metabolism of fluroxypyr, fluroxypyr methyl ester, and the herbicide fluroxypyr methylheptyl ester. II: in rat skin homogenates. 1085 48
Human
paraoxonase
(PON1) is a polymorphic, high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-associated esterase that hydrolyzes the toxic metabolites of several organophosphorus (OP) insecticides and nerve agents. The activity polymorphism is determined by a Gln/Arg (Q/R) substitution at position 192. Injection of purified PON1 protects animals from OP poisoning. In the present study, we investigated the in-vivo function of PON1 for detoxifying organophosphorus insecticides in PON1-knockout mice that were challenged via dermal exposure with diazoxon, diazinon and paraoxon. PON1-knockout mice were extremely sensitive to diazoxon. Doses (2 and 4 mg/kg) that caused no
cholinesterase
(ChE) inhibition in wild-type mice were lethal to the knockout mice, which also showed slightly increased sensitivity to the parent compound diazinon. Surprisingly, these knockout mice did not show increased sensitivity to paraoxon. In-vitro assays indicated that the PON1R192 isoform hydrolyzed diazoxon less rapidly than did the PON1Q192 isoform. In-vivo analysis, where PON1-knockout mice received the same amount of either PON1(192) isoform via intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection 4 h prior to exposure, showed that both isoforms provided a similar degree of protection against diazoxon, while PON1R192 conferred better protection against chlorpyrifos-oxon than PON1Q192. Injection of purified rabbit PON1 or either human PON1(192) isoform did not protect PONI-knockout mice from paraoxon toxicity, nor did over-expression of the human PON1R192 transgene in wild-type mice. Kinetic analysis of the two human PON1(192) isoforms revealed that the catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km) determines the in-vivo efficacy of PON1 for organophosphorus detoxication. The results indicate that PON1 plays a major role in the detoxication of diazoxon and chlorpyrifos oxon but not paraoxon.
...
PMID:Catalytic efficiency determines the in-vivo efficacy of PON1 for detoxifying organophosphorus compounds. 1119 81
Arylesterase
(EC 3.1.1.2) activity in serum was specifically measured using thiophenyl acetate in a mechanized assay at 37 degrees C with 4-bromophenylboronic acid as inhibitor of
cholinesterase
and hexacyanoferrate-III as indicator. The systematic development of a routine method, apparent limitations of thiophenyl compounds as arylesterase substrates, some kinetic constants of the enzyme, analytical variables such as precision (within-run <2% and between-run <2.5% relative standard deviation) and a preliminary reference interval (19.5-52.4 kU/l) for adults are described.
...
PMID:Continuous monitoring of arylesterase in human serum. 1141 18
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