Haux_2002_Chem.Res.Toxicol_15_1527

Reference

Title : Specificity of ethephon as a butyrylcholinesterase inhibitor and phosphorylating agent - Haux_2002_Chem.Res.Toxicol_15_1527
Author(s) : Haux JE , Lockridge O , Casida JE
Ref : Chemical Research in Toxicology , 15 :1527 , 2002
Abstract :

Butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) is inhibited by the plant growth regulator (2-chloroethyl)phosphonic acid (ethephon) as observed 25 years ago both in vitro and in vivo in rats and mice and more recently in subchronic studies at low doses with human subjects. The proposed mechanism is phosphorylation of the BChE active site at S198 by ethephon dianion. The present study tests this hypothesis directly using [(33)P]ethephon and recombinant BChE (rBChE) with single amino acid substitutions and further evaluates if BChE is the most sensitive esterase target in vitro and with mice in vivo. [(33)P]Ethephon labels purified rBChE but not enzymatically inactive diethylphosphoryl-rBChE (derivatized at S198 by preincubation with chlorpyrifos oxon) or several other esterases and proteins. Amino acid substitutions that greatly reduce rBChE sensitivity to ethephon are G117H and G117K in the oxyanion hole (which may interfere with hydrogen bonding between glycine-N-H and ethephon dianion) and A328F, A328W, and A328Y (perhaps by impeding access to the active site gorge). Other substitutions that do not affect sensitivity are D70N, D70K, D70G, and E197Q which are not directly involved in the catalytic triad. The effect of pH and buffer composition on inhibition supports the hypothesis that ethephon dianion is the actual phosphorylating agent without activation by divalent cations. Human plasma BChE in vitro and mouse plasma BChE in vitro and in vivo are more sensitive to ethephon than any other esterases detected by butyrylthiocholine or 1-naphthyl acetate hydrolysis in native-PAGE. All mouse liver esterases observed are less sensitive than plasma BChE to ethephon in vitro and in vivo. More than a dozen other esterases examined are 10-100-fold less sensitive than BChE to ethephon. Thus, BChE inhibition continues to be the most sensitive marker of ethephon exposure.

PubMedSearch : Haux_2002_Chem.Res.Toxicol_15_1527
PubMedID: 12482234

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Citations formats

Haux JE, Lockridge O, Casida JE (2002)
Specificity of ethephon as a butyrylcholinesterase inhibitor and phosphorylating agent
Chemical Research in Toxicology 15 :1527

Haux JE, Lockridge O, Casida JE (2002)
Chemical Research in Toxicology 15 :1527