The natural indole alkaloids, the beta-carbolines, are often associated with cholinesterase inhibition, especially their quaternary salts, which frequently have higher activity than the free bases. Due to lack of information explaining this fact in the literature, the cholinesterase inhibition by the natural product harmane and its two beta-carbolinium synthetic derivative salts (N-methyl and N-ethyl) was explored, together with a combination of kinetics and a molecular modeling approach. The results, mainly for the beta-carbolinium salts, demonstrated a noncompetitive inhibition profile, ruling out previous findings which associated cholinesterase inhibition by beta-carbolinium salts to a possible mimicking of the choline moiety of the natural substrate, acetylcholine. Molecular modeling studies corroborate this kind of inhibition through analyses of inhibitor/enzyme and inhibitor/substrate/enzyme complexes of both enzymes.
        
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Torres JM, Lira AF, Silva DR, Guzzo LM, Sant'Anna CM, Kummerle AE, Rumjanek VM (2012) Structural insights into cholinesterases inhibition by harmane beta-carbolinium derivatives: a kinetics-molecular modeling approach Phytochemistry81: 24-30
Torres JM, Lira AF, Silva DR, Guzzo LM, Sant'Anna CM, Kummerle AE, Rumjanek VM (2012) Phytochemistry81: 24-30