Organophosphate (OP) pesticides are commonly utilized worldwide for agricultural purposes and pose a health threat through air, ground, and water contamination. Here, we present a convenient method for diagnosing exposure to OP pesticides in humans. This immunoprecipitation method relies on extraction of butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), a biomarker of OP poisoning that adducts OP compounds, from human serum using agarose beads conjugated to anti-BChE antibodies. Extracted BChE was then digested with pepsin and analyzed for unadducted and OP-adducted peptides by high performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS). To characterize and validate this method, pooled human plasma was exposed to parathion and dichlorvos to form diethoxyphospho, aged ethoxyphospho and dimethoxyphospho adducts with BChE. Untreated plasma was also analyzed for unadducted peptides. Additionally, samples were analyzed using Ellman's assay to measure BChE functional activity. The percent inhibition of BChE was 53.5 +/- 5.76 and 95.2 +/- 0.37%, respectively, for plasma treated with parathion for 1 hour and 24 hours. The percent inhibition was 97.2 +/- 0.98 for plasma treated with dichlorvos for 1 hour. The percent inhibition was 97.9 +/- 0.41% when the plasma treated with parathion for 1 hour, parathion for 24 hour and dichlorvos for 1 hour were mixed. Individual adducts were quantified in a single chromatographic run. Untreated plasma contained 26.4 +/- 1.87 ng/mL of unadducted BChE and no adducted peptides. In contrast, the plasma sample treated with both pesticides contained no unadducted BChE, but did contain 9.46 +/- 1.10, 10.9 +/- 0.98 and 14.1 +/- 1.10 ng/mL of diethoxyphospho, aged-ethoxy, and dimethoxyphospho peptides, respectively. The ability to identify and measure BChE and BChE adducts to parathion and dichlorvos is expected to be useful for diagnosing human exposure to multiple OP pesticides.
Toxicity from acute exposure to nerve agents and organophosphorus toxicants is due to irreversible inhibition of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in the nervous system. AChE in red blood cells is a surrogate for AChE in the nervous system. Previously we developed an immunopurification method to enrich red blood cell AChE (RBC AChE) as a biomarker of exposure. The goal of the present work was to provide an alternative RBC AChE enrichment strategy, by binding RBC AChE to Hupresin affinity gel. AChE was solubilized from frozen RBC by addition of 1% Triton X-100. Insoluble debris was removed by centrifugation. The red, but not viscous, RBC AChE solution was loaded on a Hupresin affinity column. Hemoglobin and other proteins were washed off with 3 M NaCl, while retaining AChE bound to Hupresin. Denatured AChE was eluted with 1% trifluoroacetic acid. The same protocol was used for 20 mL of RBC AChE inhibited with a soman model compound. The acid denatured protein was digested with pepsin and analyzed by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry on a 6600 Triple-TOF mass spectrometer. A targeted method identified the aged soman adduct on serine 203 in peptide FGESAGAAS. It was concluded that Hupresin can be used to enrich soman-inhibited AChE solubilized from 8 mL of frozen human erythrocytes, yielding a quantity sufficient for detecting soman exposure.
Nerve agents and organophosphorus pesticides make a covalent bond with the active site serine of acetylcholinesterase (AChE), resulting in inhibition of AChE activity and toxic symptoms. AChE in red blood cells (RBCs) serves as a surrogate for AChE in the nervous system. Mass spectrometry analysis of adducts on RBC AChE could provide evidence of exposure. Our goal was to develop a method of immunopurifying human RBC AChE in quantities adequate for detecting exposure by mass spectrometry. For this purpose, we immobilized 3 commercially available anti-human acetylcholinesterase monoclonal antibodies (AE-1, AE-2, and HR2) plus 3 new monoclonal antibodies. The monoclonal antibodies were characterized for binding affinity, epitope mapping by pairing analysis, and nucleotide and amino acid sequences. AChE was solubilized from frozen RBCs with 1% (v/v) Triton X-100. A 16 mL sample containing 5.8 mug of RBC AChE was treated with a quantity of soman model compound that inhibited 50% of the AChE activity. Native and soman-inhibited RBC AChE samples were immunopurified on antibody-Sepharose beads. The immunopurified RBC AChE was digested with pepsin and analyzed by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry on a 6600 Triple-TOF mass spectrometer. The aged soman-modified PheGlyGluSerAlaGlyAlaAlaSer (FGESAGAAS) peptide was detected using a targeted analysis method. It was concluded that all 6 monoclonal antibodies could be used to immunopurify RBC AChE and that exposure to nerve agents could be detected as adducts on the active site serine of RBC AChE.
Human butyrylcholinesterase (hBChE) is currently being developed as a detoxication enzyme for stoichiometric binding and/or catalytic hydrolysis of organophosphates. Herein, we describe the use of a molecular evolution method to develop novel hBChE variants with increased resistance to stereochemically defined nerve agent model compounds of soman, sarin, and cyclosarin. Novel hBChE variants (Y332S, D340H, and Y332S/D340H) were identified with an increased resistance to nerve agent model compounds that retained robust intrinsic catalytic efficiency. Molecular dynamics simulations of these variants revealed insights into the mechanism by which these structural changes conferred nerve agent model compound resistance.
        
Title: Preclinical studies of noncharged oxime reactivators for organophosphate exposure Okolotowicz KJ, Dwyer M, Smith E, Cashman JR Ref: J Biochem Mol Toxicol, 28:23, 2014 : PubMed
A countermeasure that protects the brain from organophosphate toxicity is an unmet need. Few small molecule reactivators that can cross the blood brain barrier and reactivate brain acetyl cholinesterases have been reported. Herein, we describe preclinical investigations of a new class of amidine-oxime reactivator of cholinesterases with improved potency and blood brain barrier permeability. (Z)-N-((E)-1-(Dimethylamino)-2-(hydroxyimino)ethylidene)butan-1-aminium chloride, 1, is zwitterionic at physiological pH but possesses increased oxime nucleophilicity because of the adjacent amidine functionality. The amidine-oximes reported herein were observed to be nontoxic (up to 200 mg/kg in vivo) and are chemically and metabolically stable. The results presented herein show that uncharged amidine-oxime reactivators such as 1 can penetrate the blood brain barrier in animals and protect from the toxicity of nerve agent model compounds.
        
Title: Mass spectrometry method to identify aging pathways of Sp- and Rp-tabun adducts on human butyrylcholinesterase based on the acid labile P-N bond Jiang W, Cashman JR, Nachon F, Masson P, Schopfer LM, Lockridge O Ref: Toxicol Sci, 132:390, 2013 : PubMed
The phosphoramidate nerve agent tabun inhibits butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) and acetylcholinesterase by making a covalent bond on the active site serine. The adduct loses an alkyl group in a process called aging. The mechanism of aging of the tabun adduct is controversial. Some studies claim that aging proceeds through deamination, whereas crystal structure studies show aging by O-dealkylation. Our goal was to develop a method that clearly distinguishes between deamination and O-dealkylation. We began by studying the tetraisopropyl pyrophosphoramide adduct of BChE because this adduct has two P-N bonds. Mass spectra showed that the P-N bonds were stable during trypsin digestion at pH 8 but were cleaved during pepsin digestion at pH 2. The P-N bond in tabun was also acid labile, whereas the P-O bond was stable. A scheme to distinguish aging by deamination from aging by O-dealkylation was based on the acid labile P-N bond. BChE was inhibited with Sp- and Rp-tabun thiocholine nerve agent model compounds to make adducts identical to those of tabun with known stereochemistry. After aging and digestion with pepsin at pH 2, peptide FGES198AGAAS from Sp-tabun thiocholine had a mass of 902.2 m/z in negative mode, indicating that it had aged by deamination, whereas peptide FGES198AGAAS from Rp-tabun thiocholine had a mass of 874.2 m/z in negative mode, indicating that it had aged by O-dealkylation. BChE inhibited by authentic, racemic tabun yielded both 902.2 and 874.2 m/z peptides, indicating that both stereoisomers reacted with BChE and aged either by deamination or dealkylation.
Soman forms a stable, covalent bond with tyrosine 411 of human albumin, with tyrosines 257 and 593 in human transferrin, and with tyrosine in many other proteins. The pinacolyl group of soman is retained, suggesting that pinacolyl methylphosphonate bound to tyrosine could generate specific antibodies. Tyrosine in the pentapeptide RYGRK was covalently modified with soman simply by adding soman to the peptide. The phosphonylated-peptide was linked to keyhole limpet hemocyanin, and the conjugate was injected into rabbits. The polyclonal antiserum recognized soman-labeled human albumin, soman-mouse albumin, and soman human transferrin but not nonphosphonylated control proteins. The soman-labeled tyrosines in these proteins are surrounded by different amino acid sequences, suggesting that the polyclonal recognizes soman-tyrosine independent of the amino acid sequence. Antiserum obtained after 4 antigen injections over a period of 18 weeks was tested in a competition ELISA where it had an IC50 of 10(-11) M. The limit of detection on Western blots was 0.01 mug (15 picomoles) of soman-labeled albumin. In conclusion, a high-affinity, polyclonal antibody that specifically recognizes soman adducts on tyrosine in a variety of proteins has been produced. Such an antibody could be useful for identifying secondary targets of soman toxicity.
        
Title: Differential sensitivity of plasma carboxylesterase-null mice to parathion, chlorpyrifos and chlorpyrifos oxon, but not to diazinon, dichlorvos, diisopropylfluorophosphate, cresyl saligenin phosphate, cyclosarin thiocholine, tabun thiocholine, and carbofuran Duysen EG, Cashman JR, Schopfer LM, Nachon F, Masson P, Lockridge O Ref: Chemico-Biological Interactions, 195:189, 2012 : PubMed
Mouse blood contains four esterases that detoxify organophosphorus compounds: carboxylesterase, butyrylcholinesterase, acetylcholinesterase, and paraoxonase-1. In contrast human blood contains the latter three enzymes but not carboxylesterase. Organophosphorus compound toxicity is due to inhibition of acetylcholinesterase. Symptoms of intoxication appear after approximately 50% of the acetylcholinesterase is inhibited. However, complete inhibition of carboxylesterase and butyrylcholinesterase has no known effect on an animal's well being. Paraoxonase hydrolyzes organophosphorus compounds and is not inhibited by them. Our goal was to determine the effect of plasma carboxylesterase deficiency on response to sublethal doses of 10 organophosphorus toxicants and one carbamate pesticide. Homozygous plasma carboxylesterase deficient ES1(-/-) mice and wild-type littermates were observed for toxic signs and changes in body temperature after treatment with a single sublethal dose of toxicant. Inhibition of plasma acetylcholinesterase, butyrylcholinesterase, and plasma carboxylesterase was measured. It was found that wild-type mice were protected from the toxicity of 12.5mg/kg parathion applied subcutaneously. However, both genotypes responded similarly to paraoxon, cresyl saligenin phosphate, diisopropylfluorophosphate, diazinon, dichlorvos, cyclosarin thiocholine, tabun thiocholine, and carbofuran. An unexpected result was the finding that transdermal application of chlorpyrifos at 100mg/kg and chlorpyrifos oxon at 14mg/kg was lethal to wild-type but not to ES1(-/-) mice, showing that with this organochlorine, the presence of carboxylesterase was harmful rather than protective. It was concluded that carboxylesterase in mouse plasma protects from high toxicity agents, but the amount of carboxylesterase in plasma is too low to protect from low toxicity compounds that require high doses to inhibit acetylcholinesterase.
        
Title: Nonquaternary reactivators for organophosphate-inhibited cholinesterases Kalisiak J, Ralph EC, Cashman JR Ref: Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 55:465, 2012 : PubMed
A new class of amidine-oxime reactivators of organophosphate (OP)-inhibited cholinesterases (ChE) was synthesized and tested in vitro and in vivo. Compared with 2-PAM, the most promising cyclic amidine-oxime (i.e., 12e) showed comparable or greater reactivation of OP-inactivated AChE and OP-inactivated BChE. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a nonquaternary oxime that has, comparable to 2-PAM, in vitro potency for reactivation of Sarin (GB)-inhibited AChE and BChE. Amidine-oximes were tested in vitro, and reactivation rates for OP-inactivated butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) were greater than those for 2-PAM or MINA. Amidine-oxime reactivation rates for OP-inactivated acetylcholinesterase (AChE) were lower compared to 2-PAM but greater compared with MINA. Amidine-oximes were tested in vivo for protection against the toxicity of nerve agent model compounds. (i.e., a model of Sarin). Post-treatment (i.e., 5 min after OP exposure, i.p,) with amidine oximes 7a-c and 12a, 12c, 12e, 12f, and 15b (145 mumol/kg, i.p.) protected 100% of the mice challenged with the sarin model compound. Even at 25% of the initial dose of amidine-oxime (i.e., a dose of 36 mumol/kg, i.p.), 7b and 12e protected 100% of the animals challenged with the sarin nerve agent model compound that caused lethality in 6/11 animals without amidine-oxime.
        
Title: Identification of Human Butyrylcholinesterase Organophosphate-Resistant Variants through a Novel Mammalian Enzyme Functional Screen Zhang J, Chen S, Ralph EC, Dwyer MA, Cashman JR Ref: Journal of Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics, 343:673, 2012 : PubMed
Human butyrylcholinesterase (hBChE) is currently being developed as a detoxication enzyme for the catalytic hydrolysis or stoichiometric binding of organophosphates (OPs). Previously, rationally designed hBChE mutants (G117H and E197Q) were reported in the literature and showed the feasibility of engineering OP hydrolytic functional activity into hBChE. However, the OP hydrolysis rate for G117H is too low for clinical utility. Additional OP-resistant hBChE variants with greater hydrolysis rates are needed as OP nerve-agent countermeasures for therapeutic utility. As described herein, a directed molecular evolution process was used to identify amino acid residues that contribute to OP-resistant functional activity of hBChE variants. In this article, we describe the development and validation of a novel method to identify hBChE variants with OP-resistant functional activity (decreased rate of OP inhibition). The method reported herein used an adenoviral protein expression system combined with a functional screening protocol of OP nerve-agent model compounds that have been shown to have functional properties similar to authentic OP nerve-agent compounds. The hBChE screening method was robust for transfection efficiency, library diversity, and reproducibility of positive signals. The screening approach not only identified the previously reported hBChE G117H variant, but also identified a series of additional hBChE variants, including hBChE G117N, G117R, E197C, and L125V, that exhibited OP-resistant functional activities not reported previously. The mammalian functional screening approach can serve as a cornerstone for further optimization and screening for OP-resistant hBChEs for potential therapeutic applications.
Organophosphorus (OP) nerve agents are potent suicide inhibitors of the essential neurotransmitter-regulating enzyme acetylcholinesterase. Due to their acute toxicity, there is significant interest in developing effective countermeasures to OP poisoning. Here we impart nerve agent hydrolysis activity into the human drug metabolism enzyme carboxylesterase 1. Using crystal structures of the target enzyme in complex with nerve agent as a guide, a pair of histidine and glutamic acid residues were designed proximal to the enzyme's native catalytic triad. The resultant variant protein demonstrated significantly increased rates of reactivation following exposure to sarin, soman, and cyclosarin. Importantly, the addition of these residues did not alter the high affinity binding of nerve agents to this protein. Thus, using two amino acid substitutions, a novel enzyme was created that efficiently converted a group of hemisubstrates, compounds that can start but not complete a reaction cycle, into bona fide substrates. Such approaches may lead to novel countermeasures for nerve agent poisoning.
        
Title: Amidine-oximes: reactivators for organophosphate exposure Kalisiak J, Ralph EC, Zhang J, Cashman JR Ref: Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 54:3319, 2011 : PubMed
A new class of amidine-oxime reactivators of organophosphate (OP)-inhibited cholinesterases (ChE) were designed, synthesized, and tested. These compounds represent a novel group of oximes with enhanced capabilities of crossing the blood-brain barrier. Lack of brain penetration is a major limitation for currently used oximes as antidotes of OP poisoning. The concept described herein relies on a combination of an amidine residue and oxime functionality whereby the amidine increases the binding affinity to the ChE and the oxime is responsible for reactivation. Amidine-oximes were tested in vitro and reactivation rates for OP-BuChE were greater than pralidoxime (2-PAM) or monoisonitrosoacetone (MINA). Amidine-oxime reactivation rates for OP-AChE were lower compared to 2-PAM but greater compared with MINA. After pretreatment for 30 min with oximes 15c and 15d (145 mumol/kg, ip) mice were challenged with a soman model compound. In addition, 15d was tested in a post-treatment experiment (145 mumol/kg, ip, administration 5 min after sarin model compound exposure). In both cases, amidine-oximes afforded 100% 24 h survival in an animal model of OP exposure.
Organophosphorus (OP) nerve agents are potent toxins that inhibit cholinesterases and produce a rapid and lethal cholinergic crisis. Development of protein-based therapeutics is being pursued with the goal of preventing nerve agent toxicity and protecting against the long-term side effects of these agents. The drug-metabolizing enzyme human carboxylesterase 1 (hCE1) is a candidate protein-based therapeutic because of its similarity in structure and function to the cholinesterase targets of nerve agent poisoning. However, the ability of wild-type hCE1 to process the G-type nerve agents sarin and cyclosarin has not been determined. We report the crystal structure of hCE1 in complex with the nerve agent cyclosarin. We further use stereoselective nerve agent analogs to establish that hCE1 exhibits a 1700- and 2900-fold preference for the P(R) enantiomers of analogs of soman and cyclosarin, respectively, and a 5-fold preference for the P(S) isomer of a sarin analog. Finally, we show that for enzyme inhibited by racemic mixtures of bona fide nerve agents, hCE1 spontaneously reactivates in the presence of sarin but not soman or cyclosarin. The addition of the neutral oxime 2,3-butanedione monoxime increases the rate of reactivation of hCE1 from sarin inhibition by more than 60-fold but has no effect on reactivation with the other agents examined. Taken together, these data demonstrate that hCE1 is only reactivated after inhibition with the more toxic P(S) isomer of sarin. These results provide important insights toward the long-term goal of designing novel forms of hCE1 to act as protein-based therapeutics for nerve agent detoxification.
Nerve agents are highly toxic organophosphorus compounds (OPs) that are used as chemical warfare agents. Developing a catalytic bioscavenger to efficiently detoxify nerve agents in the bloodstream of affected individuals has been recognized as an attractive approach to prevent nerve agent toxicity. However, the search for nerve agent catalysts has been hindered by the lack of efficient direct assays for nerve agent hydrolysis. In addition, authentic nerve agents are restricted and access to use for experiments by the general research community is prohibited. Herein we report development of a method that combines use of novel nerve agent model compounds possessing a thiocholine leaving group that reacts with the fluorescent thio-detection probe, BES-Thio, to afford detection of sub-micromolar amounts of nerve agent model compounds hydrolysis products. The detection sensitivity of BES-Thio assay was approximately 10 times better than the Ellman assay. This developed method is useful as a direct, sensitive screening method for evaluating OP hydrolysis efficiency from catalytic cholinesterases. When the assay was assembled in the presence of oxime, OP-inhibited cholinesterases that were able to be reactivated by specific oxime showed oxime-assisted enzyme-mediated OP hydrolysis. Therefore, this method is also useful to screen oxime analogs to identify novel agents that can reactivate OP-inhibited cholinesterases or to screen various enzymes to identify pseudo-catalytic bioscavengers that can be readily reactivated by clinically approved oximes.
Both G and V type nerve agents possess a center of chirality about phosphorus. The S(p) enantiomers are generally more potent inhibitors than their R(p) counterparts toward acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE). To develop model compounds with defined centers of chirality that mimic the target nerve agent structures, we synthesized both the S(p) and the R(p) stereoisomers of two series of G type nerve agent model compounds in enantiomerically enriched form. The two series of model compounds contained identical substituents on the phosphorus as the G type agents, except that thiomethyl (CH(3)-S-) and thiocholine [(CH(3))(3)NCH(2)CH(2)-S-] groups were used to replace the traditional nerve agent leaving groups (i.e., fluoro for GB, GF, and GD and cyano for GA). Inhibition kinetic studies of the thiomethyl- and thiocholine-substituted series of nerve agent model compounds revealed that the S(p) enantiomers of both series of compounds showed greater inhibition potency toward AChE and BChE. The level of stereoselectivity, as indicated by the ratio of the bimolecular inhibition rate constants between S(p) and R(p) enantiomers, was greatest for the GF model compounds in both series. The thiocholine analogues were much more potent than the corresponding thiomethyl analogues. With the exception of the GA model compounds, both series showed greater potency against AChE than BChE. The stereoselectivity (i.e., S(p) > R(p)), enzyme selectivity, and dynamic range of inhibition potency contributed from these two series of compounds suggest that the combined application of these model compounds will provide useful research tools for understanding interactions of nerve agents with cholinesterase and other enzymes involved in nerve agent and organophosphate pharmacology. The potential of and limitations for using these model compounds in the development of biological therapeutics against nerve agent toxicity are also discussed.
The goal was to test 14 nerve agent model compounds of soman, sarin, tabun, and cyclohexyl methylphosphonofluoridate (GF) for their suitability as substitutes for true nerve agents. We wanted to know whether the model compounds would form the identical covalent adduct with human butyrylcholinesterase that is produced by reaction with true nerve agents. Nerve agent model compounds containing thiocholine or thiomethyl in place of fluorine or cyanide were synthesized as Sp and Rp stereoisomers. Purified human butyrylcholinesterase was treated with a 45-fold molar excess of nerve agent analogue at pH 7.4 for 17 h at 21 degrees C. The protein was denatured by boiling and was digested with trypsin. Aged and nonaged active site peptide adducts were quantified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry of the tryptic digest mixture. The active site peptides were isolated by HPLC and analyzed by MALDI-TOF-TOF mass spectrometry. Serine 198 of butyrylcholinesterase was covalently modified by all 14 compounds. Thiocholine was the leaving group in all compounds that had thiocholine in place of fluorine or cyanide. Thiomethyl was the leaving group in the GF thiomethyl compounds. However, sarin thiomethyl compounds released either thiomethyl or isopropyl, while soman thiomethyl compounds released either thiomethyl or pinacolyl. Thiocholine compounds reacted more rapidly with butyrylcholinesterase than thiomethyl compounds. Labeling with the model compounds resulted in aged adducts that had lost the O-alkyl group (O-ethyl for tabun, O-cyclohexyl for GF, isopropyl for sarin, and pinacolyl for soman) in addition to the thiocholine or thiomethyl group. The nerve agent model compounds containing thiocholine and the GF thiomethyl analogue were found to be suitable substitutes for true soman, sarin, tabun, and GF in terms of the adduct that they produced with human butyrylcholinesterase. However, the soman and sarin thiomethyl compounds yielded two types of adducts, one of which was thiomethyl phosphonate, a modification not found after treatment with authentic soman and sarin.
        
Title: Catalytic antibodies that hydrolyze (-)-cocaine obtained by a high-throughput procedure Cashman JR, Berkman CE, Underiner GE Ref: Journal of Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics, 293:952, 2000 : PubMed
Antibodies to a 2beta-carboxamido-2beta-phosphonate transition-state analog of (-)-cocaine benzoate ester hydrolysis were elicited in mice. A large number of hybridoma cell lines were propagated, and the catalytic activity of culture fluid was determined with a high-throughput photometric assay using cocaine benzoyl thioester as substrate. Binding avidity of the hybridoma supernatants to the phosphonate hapten was also determined. The initial rate constants for cocaine benzoyl thioester hydrolysis and binding avidity for a large number of hybridoma supernatants elicited to the phosphonate hapten did not always correlate. The lack of correlation of substrate hydrolysis with the binding affinity of 70 catalytic antibodies was also observed for (-)-cocaine hydrolysis using derivatization and HPLC analysis of methyl ecgonine as meta-nitrococaine. The k(cat) values for cocaine benzoyl thioester hydrolysis by monoclonal antibodies 3, 5, and 12 were 38, 4.2, and 0. 6 min(-1), respectively. For monoclonal antibody 5, the selectivity ratios (K(i) value divided by the K(m) value for the hydrolysis of cocaine benzoyl thioester) with ecgonine benzoyl ester, ecgonine methyl ester, norcocaine, and ecgonine were 101, 25, 9.4, and 4, respectively. Three active esterolytic monoclonal antibodies identified with the high-throughput assay procedure were examined in detail for their ability to hydrolyze (-)-cocaine. The k(cat) values for the hydrolysis of (-)-cocaine with monoclonal antibodies 3, 5, and 12 were 6.6, 0.4, and 0.1 min(-1), respectively. Hydrolysis of (-)-cocaine by monoclonal antibody 3 approached the k(cat) value for that of human butyrylcholinesterase. Cocaine esterolytic catalytic antibodies that approach or exceed the catalytic efficiency of human butyrylcholinesterase may represent a new pharmacological intervention approach to the treatment of cocaine abuse, and the high-throughput process described here represents an advance in the effort to develop clinically useful antibodies.
Butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) has a major role in cocaine detoxication. The rate at which human BChE hydrolyzes cocaine is slow, with a kcat of 3.9 min(-1) and Km of 14 microM. Our goal was to improve cocaine hydrolase activity by mutating residues near the active site. The mutant A328Y had a kcat of 10.2 min(-1) and Km of 9 microM for a 4-fold improvement in catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km). Since benzoylcholine (kcat 15,000 min(-1)) and cocaine form the same acyl-enzyme intermediate but are hydrolyzed at 4000-fold different rates, it was concluded that a step leading to formation of the acyl-enzyme intermediate was rate-limiting. BChE purified from plasma of cat, horse, and chicken was tested for cocaine hydrolase activity. Compared with human BChE, horse BChE had a 2-fold higher kcat but a lower binding affinity, cat BChE was similar to human, and chicken BChE had only 10% of the catalytic efficiency. Naturally occurring genetic variants of human BChE were tested for cocaine hydrolase activity. The J and K variants (E497V and A539T) had k(cat) and Km values similar to wild-type, but because these variants are reduced to 66 and 33% of normal levels in human blood, respectively, people with these variants may be at risk for cocaine toxicity. The atypical variant (D70G) had a 10-fold lower binding affinity for cocaine, suggesting that persons with the atypical variant of BChE may experience severe or fatal cocaine intoxication when administered a dose of cocaine that is not harmful to others.
        
Title: Cocaine benzoyl thioester: synthesis, kinetics of base hydrolysis, and application to the assay of cocaine esterases Cashman JR, Berkman CE, Underiner G, Kolly CA, Hunter AD Ref: Chemical Research in Toxicology, 11:895, 1998 : PubMed
The synthesis and characterization of diastereomers of cocaine benzoyl thioester is described. Allococaine benzoyl thioester and allopseudococaine benzoyl thioester were synthesized by the conjugate addition of p-methoxytolyl thiol to ecgonine methyl ester followed by debenzylation and benzoylation. The absolute structure of the hydrochloride salt of the major ecgonine p-methoxytolyl sulfide formed was determined by single-crystal diffraction analysis and used to establish the addition geometry. When placed in aqueous solution, the cocaine benzoyl thioester diastereomers hydrolyzed to give thioecgonine methyl ester. The rate of cocaine benzoyl thioester hydrolysis was carefully investigated spectrophotometrically by using the Ellman reagent. At neutral pH, the hydrolysis of the diastereomers was found to proceed at detectable rates. Upon increasing pH, the rate of hydrolysis of cocaine benzoyl thioester diastereomers was increased and the reaction was catalyzed by basic buffer species. In addition to defining the kinetics of hydrolysis in aqueous solution, cocaine benzoyl thioester was utilized as a highly efficient method to monitor the activity of cholinesterases and pig liver esterase. Use of cocaine benzoyl thioester represents a rapid and sensitive way to screen for cocaine esterase activity.
        
Title: Stereoselective inhibition of human butyrylcholinesterase by phosphonothiolate analogs of (+)- and (-)-cocaine Berkman CE, Underiner GE, Cashman JR Ref: Biochemical Pharmacology, 54:1261, 1997 : PubMed
The hydrolysis of cocaine (benzoylecgonine methyl ester) to ecgonine methyl ester by human butyrylcholinesterase (BCHE; EC 3.1.1.8) has been shown previously to constitute an important means to detoxicate this material to pharmacologically inactive metabolites. The naturally occurring (-)-cocaine is hydrolyzed to ecgonine methyl ester approximately 2000 times slower than the unnatural (+)-cocaine isomer. In good agreement with previous studies, (-)-cocaine bound to human BCHE with relatively good affinity and competitively inhibited the hydrolysis of the spectrophotometric substrate butyrylthiocholine with a Ki value of 8.0 microM. Similarly, (+)-cocaine also showed relatively high affinity for the human BCHE and competitively inhibited butyrylthiocholine hydrolysis with a Ki value of 5.4 microM. The phosphonothiolates corresponding to the transition state analogs for both (-)- and (+)-cocaine hydrolysis were synthesized and tested as inhibitors of human BCHE-catalyzed hydrolysis of butyrylthiocholine. The phosphonothiolate corresponding to the transition state for (-)-cocaine hydrolysis was a competitive inhibitor with a Ki value of 55.8 microM. The phosphonothiolate corresponding to the transition state for (+)-cocaine hydrolysis gave a Ki value of 25.9 microM, but, in addition, it also showed irreversible inhibition with a ki of inactivation of 68.8 min-1 M-1. It is likely that the mechanism-based inhibitor described herein may find use as a mechanistic probe of butyrylcholinesterase action and also possibly aid in the purification of this class of esterases.
        
Title: Human liver carboxylesterase hCE-1: binding specificity for cocaine, heroin, and their metabolites and analogs Brzezinski MR, Spink BJ, Dean RA, Berkman CE, Cashman JR, Bosron WF Ref: Drug Metabolism & Disposition: The Biological Fate of Chemicals, 25:1089, 1997 : PubMed
Purified human liver carboxylesterase (hCE-1) catalyzes the hydrolysis of cocaine to form benzoylecgonine, the deacetylation of heroin to form 6-acetylmorphine, and the ethanol-dependent transesterification of cocaine to form cocaethylene. In this study, the binding affinities of cocaine, cocaine metabolites and analogs, heroin, morphine, and 6-acetylmorphine for hCE-1 were evaluated by measuring their kinetic inhibition constants with 4-methylumbelliferyl acetate in a rapid spectrophotometric assay. The naturally occurring (R)-(-)-cocaine isomer displayed the highest affinity of all cocaine and heroin analogs or metabolites. The pseudo- or allopseudococaine isomers of cocaine exhibited lower affinity indicating that binding to the enzyme is stereoselective. The methyl ester, benzoyl, and N-methyl groups of cocaine play important roles in binding because removal of these groups increased K(i) values substantially. Compounds containing a variety of hydrophobic substitutions at the benzoyl group of cocaine bound to the enzyme with high affinity. The high K(i) value obtained for cocaethylene relative to cocaine is consistent with weaker binding to the esterase and a longer elimination half-life reported for the metabolite. The spectrophotometric competitive inhibition assay used here represents an effective method to identify drug or environmental esters metabolized by carboxylesterases like hCE-1.