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Aspartate-70 to glycine substitution confers resistance to naturally occurring and synthetic anionic-site ligands on inovo produced human butyrylcholinesterase

Authors :
Averell Gnatt
Yael Loewenstein
Hermona Soreq
Lewis F. Neville
Source :
Journal of Neuroscience Research. 27:452-460
Publication Year :
1990
Publisher :
Wiley, 1990.

Abstract

The "atypical" allelic variant of human butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) can be characterized by its failure to bind the local anesthetic dibucaine, the muscle relaxant succinylcholine, and the naturally occurring steroidal alkaloid solanidine, all assumed to bind to the charged anionic site component within the normal BuChE enzyme. A single nucleotide substitution conferring a change of aspartate-70 into glycine was recently reported in the CHE gene encoding BuChE from several individuals having the "atypical" BuChE phenotype, whereas in two other DNA samples, this mutation appeared together with a second alteration conferring a change of serine-425 into proline. To separately assess the contribution of each of these mutations toward anionic site interactions in BuChE, three transcription constructs were engineered with each of these substitutions alone or both of them together. Xenopus oocyte microinjection of normal or mutated synthetic BuChEmRNA transcripts was employed in conjunction with biochemical analyzes of the resultant recombinant BuChE variants. The presence of the Gly-70 mutation alone was found to render the enzyme resistant to 100 microM solanidine and 5 mM succinylcholine; concentrations sufficient to inhibit the "normal," Asp-70 containing BuChE by over 50%. Furthermore, when completely inhibited by the organophosphorous poison diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP), Gly-70 BuChE failed to be reactivated by 10 mM of the cholinesterase-specific oxime pyridine 2-aldoxime methiodide (2-PAM); a concentration restoring about 50% of activity in the "normal" Asp-70 recombinant enzyme. The Pro-425 mutation alone had no apparent influence on BuChE interactions with any of these ligands. However, it conferred synergistic effects on some of the anionic site changes induced by the Gly-70 mutation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Details

ISSN :
10974547 and 03604012
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neuroscience Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....523285c6515cf8ab46ba84648d2c7a65
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jnr.490270404