Fasciculin, a 6750-Da peptide from the venom of Dendroaspis, is known to inhibit reversibly mammalian and fish acetylcholinesterases at picomolar concentrations, but is a relatively weak inhibitor of avian, reptile, and insect acetylcholinesterases and mammalian butyryl-cholinesterases. An examination of fasciculin association with several mutant forms of recombinant DNA-derived acetylcholinesterase from mouse shows that it interacts with a cluster of residues near the rim of the gorge on the enzyme. The aromatic residues, Trp286, Tyr72, and Tyr124, have the most marked influence on fasciculin binding, whereas Asp74, a charged residue in the vicinity of the binding site that affects the binding of low molecular weight inhibitors, has little influence on fasciculin binding. The 3 aromatic residues are unique to the susceptible acetylcholinesterases and, along with Asp74, constitute part of the peripheral anionic site. Fasciculin falls in the family of three-loop toxins that include the receptor blocking alpha-toxins and cardiotoxins. From this basic structural motif, a binding site has evolved on fasciculin to be highly specific for the peripheral site on acetylcholinesterase. Acetylthiocholine affects rates of fasciculin binding at concentrations causing substrate inhibition. In the case of the mutant cholinesterases where rates of fasciculin dissociation are more rapid, steady state kinetic parameters also show acetylthiocholine-fasciculin competition to be consistent with occupation at a peripheral or substrate inhibition site rather than the active center.
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Toxicon
September 2018
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Faculty of Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Division of BioAnalytical Chemistry, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Electronic address:
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) from Electrophorus electricus (eel) was immobilized on the surface of amino-modified paramagnetic beads to serve as a model for the development, validation and application of a new affinity-based ligand-fishing assay for the discovery of bioactive peptides from complex protein mixtures such as venoms. Nano liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (nanoLC-MS) was used for the analysis of trapped peptides. Using enzyme-functionalized beads, the ligand-fishing assay was evaluated and optimized using a peptide reference mixture composed of one acetylcholinesterase binder (fasciculin-II) and five non-binders (mambalgin-1, angiotensin-II, bradykinin, cardiotoxin and α-bungarotoxin).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biomol Struct Dyn
June 2016
a Federal Institute of Education Science and Technology of Espirito Santo, unit Vila Velha, Avenida Ministro Salgado Filho, 1000, 29106-010 Soteco, Espírito Santo - ES , Brazil.
Here, we propose five fullerene (C60) derivatives as new drugs against Alzheimer's disease (AD). These compounds were designed to act as new human acetylcholinesterase (HssAChE) inhibitors by blocking its fasciculin II (FASII) binding site. Docking and molecular dynamic results show that our proposals bind to the HssAChE tunnel entrance, forming stable complex, and further binding free energy calculations suggest that three of the derivatives proposed here could be potent HssAChE inhibitors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pept Sci
September 2015
Department of Chemistry and Pharmacy, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Schuhstr. 19, 91052, Erlangen, Germany.
J Theor Biol
May 2015
Department of BioSciences, COMSATS Institute of Information Technology, Park Road, Chak Shahzad, Islamabad-44000, Pakistan. Electronic address:
Acetylcholinesterases (AChE) are enzymes that function in hydrolyzing the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Diminished levels of acetylcholine have been reported for various neurodegenerative diseases, especially Alzheimer's. Therefore, acetylcholinesterase inhibitors are being considered quite effective in treating these diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStructure
April 2014
Department of Biological Chemistry, The Alexander Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel. Electronic address:
Our understanding of protein evolution would greatly benefit from mapping of binding landscapes, i.e., changes in protein-protein binding affinity due to all single mutations.
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