Kang_2011_Mol.Biochem.Parasitol_175_154

Reference

Title : Three acetylcholinesterases of the pinewood nematode, Bursaphelenchus xylophilus: insights into distinct physiological functions - Kang_2011_Mol.Biochem.Parasitol_175_154
Author(s) : Kang JS , Lee DW , Choi JY , Je YH , Koh YH , Lee SH
Ref : Molecular & Biochemical Parasitology , 175 :154 , 2011
Abstract :

Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) plays a key role in postsynaptic transmission in most animals. Nematodes encode multiple AChEs, implying its functional diversity. To explore physiological functions of multiple AChEs, three distinct AChEs (BxACE-1, BxACE-2, and BxACE-3) were identified and characterized from the pinewood nematode. Sequencing comparison with Torpedo AChE and Caenorhabditis elegans ACEs identified choline-binding site, catalytic triad functional site, three internal disulfide bonds and aromatic residues for the catalytic gorge. Transcriptional profiling by quantitative real-time PCR revealed that BxACE-3 is more actively transcribed than BxACE-1 (2-3 times) and BxACE-2 (9-18 times) in both propagative and dispersal stages. The three BxACEs were functionally expressed using baculovirus system. Kinetic analysis of in vitro-expressed BxACEs revealed that the substrate specificity was highest in BxACE-1 whereas the catalytic efficiency was highest in BxACE-2. In inhibition assay, BxACE-3 showed the lowest inhibition rate. Taken together, it appears that both BxACE-1 and BxACE-2 play common but non-overlapping roles in synaptic transmission, whereas BxACE-3 may have non-neuronal functions. The current findings should provide valuable insights into the evolutionary process and various physiological roles of AChE.

PubMedSearch : Kang_2011_Mol.Biochem.Parasitol_175_154
PubMedID: 21074580
Gene_locus related to this paper: burxy-ACHE1 , burxy-ACHE2 , burxy-ACHE3

Related information

Gene_locus burxy-ACHE1    burxy-ACHE2    burxy-ACHE3

Citations formats

Kang JS, Lee DW, Choi JY, Je YH, Koh YH, Lee SH (2011)
Three acetylcholinesterases of the pinewood nematode, Bursaphelenchus xylophilus: insights into distinct physiological functions
Molecular & Biochemical Parasitology 175 :154

Kang JS, Lee DW, Choi JY, Je YH, Koh YH, Lee SH (2011)
Molecular & Biochemical Parasitology 175 :154