Sheng Wu Gong Cheng Xue Bao
November 2024
Ghrelin, a hormone mainly produced and released by the stomach, has numerous functions, including releasing growth hormones, regulating appetite, and processing sugar and lipids. Researchers have made great efforts to study the relationship between ghrelin and metabolic diseases. It is believed that human butyrylcholinesterase (hBChE) could hydrolyze ghrelin to the inactive form (desacyl-ghrelin).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecombinant bacterial cocaine esterase (CocE) represents a potential protein therapeutic for cocaine use disorder treatment. Unfortunately, the native enzyme was highly unstable and the corresponding mutagenized derivatives, RBP-8000 and E196-301, although improving thermo-stability and half-life, were a partial solution to the problem. For cocaine use disorder treatment, an efficient cocaine-metabolizing enzyme with a longer residence time in circulation would be needed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTherapeutic treatment of cocaine toxicity or addiction is a grand medical challenge. As a promising therapeutic strategy for treatment of cocaine toxicity and addiction to develop a highly efficient cocaine hydrolase (CocH) capable of accelerating cocaine metabolism to produce physiologically/biologically inactive metabolites, our previously designed A199S/S287G/A328W/Y332G mutant of human butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), known as cocaine hydrolase-1 (CocH1), possesses the desirably high catalytic activity against cocaine. The C-terminus of CocH1, truncated after amino acid #529, was fused to human serum albumin (HSA) to extend the biological half-life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) is a widely distributed plasma enzyme. For decades, numerous research efforts have been directed at engineering BChE as a bioscavenger of organophosphorus insecticides and chemical warfare nerve agents. However, it has been a grand challenge to cost-efficiently produce BChE in large-scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases are leading causes of morbidity and mortality for human beings, and thrombosis is the major risk factor. Thrombolytic therapy has been testified to be the most effective approach to cure thrombosis-related diseases. In clinical treatment, we often adopt a combination therapeutic regimen of both thrombolytic and anticoagulant agents to prevent the recurrence of thrombosis.
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