Fernandez_1996_J.Neurochem_66_1335

Reference

Title : Tetrameric (G4) acetylcholinesterase: structure, localization, and physiological regulation. - Fernandez_1996_J.Neurochem_66_1335
Author(s) : Fernandez HL , Moreno RD , Inestrosa NC
Ref : Journal of Neurochemistry , 66 :1335 , 1996
Abstract :

Acetylcholinesterase (AChE), a highly conserved enzyme in the animal kingdom, is distributed throughout a wide range of vertebrate tissues where it is expressed as multiple molecular forms comprising different arrangements of catalytic and structural subunits. The major AChE form in the CNS is an amphiphilic globular tetramer (G4 AChE) consisting of four identical catalytic subunits attached to cellular membranes by a hydrophobic noncatalytic subunit (P-subunit). This study focuses primarily on current data involving the structure of the G4 AChE P-subunit, the expression and regulation of G4 AChE during development and adulthood, and its role(s) in certain neurological disorders including Alzheimer's disease.

PubMedSearch : Fernandez_1996_J.Neurochem_66_1335
PubMedID: 8627284

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Citations formats

Fernandez HL, Moreno RD, Inestrosa NC (1996)
Tetrameric (G4) acetylcholinesterase: structure, localization, and physiological regulation.
Journal of Neurochemistry 66 :1335

Fernandez HL, Moreno RD, Inestrosa NC (1996)
Journal of Neurochemistry 66 :1335