Publications by authors named "Jeremy M Beck"

Article Synopsis
  • Organophosphorus (OP) compounds, including G and V nerve agents and common pesticides, pose serious health risks, causing thousands of deaths annually due to their toxicity and the resulting cholinergic crisis from acetylcholine accumulation in the nervous system.
  • Despite extensive research, no new treatments for OP exposure have emerged since the mid-1900s, with challenges including the need for effective reactivation of inhibited enzymes and crossing the blood-brain barrier.
  • Recent developments in Mannich bases show promise, as they not only reactivate inhibited acetylcholinesterase (AChE) but can also restore activity to aged forms of the enzyme, signaling potential advances in therapeutic strategies against OP poisoning.
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Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is an essential enzyme that can be targeted by organophosphorus (OP) compounds, including nerve agents. Following exposure to OPs, AChE becomes phosphylated (inhibited) and undergoes a subsequent aging process where the OP-AChE adduct is dealkylated. The aged AChE is unable to hydrolyze acetylcholine, resulting in accumulation of the neurotransmitter in the central nervous system (CNS) and elsewhere.

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The concepts of activity cliffs and matched molecular pairs (MMP) are recent paradigms for analysis of data sets to identify structural changes that may be used to modify the potency of lead molecules in drug discovery projects. Analysis of MMPs was recently demonstrated as a feasible technique for quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) modeling of prospective compounds. Although within a small data set, the lack of matched pairs, and the lack of knowledge about specific chemical transformations limit prospective applications.

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A computational investigation into the hydrolysis of two methyl septanosides, methyl-α-D-glycero-D-guloseptanoside and methyl-β-D-glycero-D-guloseptanoside was undertaken. These septanosides were chosen as model compounds for comparison to methyl pyranosides and allowed direct comparison of α versus β hydrolysis rates for a specific septanoside isomer. Results suggest that hydrolysis takes place without proceeding through a transition state, an observation that was suggested in previous computational studies on exocyclic bond cleavage of carbohydrates.

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Butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) is a stoichiometric bioscavenger against organophosphorus (OP) nerve agent poisoning, and efforts to make BuChE variants that are catalytically active against a wide spectrum of nerve agents have been ongoing for the last decade. In order to understand the structural consequences for BuChE, we carried out extensive molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on wild-type BuChE (PDB ID: 1P0I) and several known and new variants of this enzyme, but without the presence of any ligand in the active site. The MD simulations on WT-BuChE identified two labile orientations for the catalytic serine, and also showed the likelihood of a backdoor.

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The enzyme human paraoxonase 1 (huPON1) has demonstrated significant potential for use as a bioscavenger for treatment of exposure to organophosphorus (OP) nerve agents. Herein we report the development of protein models for the human isoform derived from a crystal structure of a chimeric version of the protein (pdb ID: 1V04) and a homology model derived from the related enzyme diisopropylfluorophosphatase (pdb ID: 1XHR). From these structural models, binding modes for OP substrates are predicted, and these poses are found to orient substrates in proximity to residues known to modulate specificity of the enzyme.

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The phosphonylation mechanism of AChE and the S203C mutation by sarin (GB) is evaluated using two reaction schemes: a small model nucleophile (ethoxide, CH(3)CH(2)O(-)) and quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) simulations. Calculations utilizing small model nucleophiles indicate that the reaction barrier for addition to GB is the rate-limiting step for both ethoxide and ethyl thiolate (CH(3)CH(2)S(-)); moreover, the activation barrier for addition to the phosphorus center of GB by ethyl thiolate is significantly larger (13.2 kcal/mol) than for ethoxide (8.

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Both G and V type nerve agents possess a center of chirality about phosphorus. The S(p) enantiomers are generally more potent inhibitors than their R(p) counterparts toward acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE). To develop model compounds with defined centers of chirality that mimic the target nerve agent structures, we synthesized both the S(p) and the R(p) stereoisomers of two series of G type nerve agent model compounds in enantiomerically enriched form.

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Density functional theory calculations were employed to study the reaction of five nerve agents with model nucleophiles, including EtX(-) and EtXH (X=O, S, Se) for serine, cysteine and selenocysteine, respectively. Calculations at the B3LYP/6-311++G(2d,p) level of theory predict an exothermic reaction between ethoxide and all of the nerve agents studied. As compared to EtO(-) as a nucleophile, these reactions become approximately 30 kcal/mol more endothermic for EtS(-), and by approximately 40 kcal/mol for EtSe(-).

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