Insects have evolved an extremely sensitive olfactory system that is essential for a series of physiological and behavioral activities. Some carboxylesterases (CCEs) comprise a major subfamily of odorant-degrading enzymes (ODEs) playing a crucial role in odorant signal inactivation to maintain the odorant receptor sensitivity. In this study, 93 CCEs were annotated in the genome of the German cockroach Blattella germanica, a serious urban pest. Phylogenetic and digital tissue expression pattern analyses identified two antenna-enriched CCEs, BgerCCE021e3 and BgerCCE021d1, as candidate ODEs. RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated knockdown of BgerCCE021e3 and BgerCCE021d1 resulted in partial anosmia with experimental insects exhibiting reduced attraction to ester volatile resources and slower olfactory responses than controls. Furthermore, enzymatic conversion of geranyl acetate by crude male antennal extracts from BgerCCE021e3 and BgerCCE021d1 RNAi insects was also significantly reduced. Our results provide evidence for CCE function in German cockroach olfaction and provide a basis for further exploring behavioral inhibitors that target olfactory-related CCEs.
AIM: Our preliminary results show that huperzine A, an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor used to treat Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients in China, exhibits different pharmacokinetic features in elderly and young healthy subjects. However, its pharmacokinetic data in elderly subjects remains unavailable to date. Thus, we developed a population pharmacokinetic (PPK) model of huperzine A in elderly Chinese people, and identified the covariate affecting its pharmacokinetics for optimal individual administration. METHODS: A total of 341 serum huperzine A concentration records was obtained from 2 completed clinical trials (14 elderly healthy subjects in a phase I pharmacokinetic study; 35 elderly AD patients in a phase II study). Population pharmacokinetic analysis was performed using the non-linear mixed-effect modeling software Phoenix NLME1.1.1. The effects of age, gender, body weight, height, creatinine, endogenous creatinine clearance rate as well as drugs administered concomitantly were analyzed. Bootstrap and visual predictive checks were used simultaneously to validate the final population pharmacokinetics models. RESULTS: The plasma concentration-time profile of huperzine A was best described by a one-compartment model with first-order absorption and elimination. Age was identified as the covariate having significant influence on huperzine A clearance. The final PPK model of huperzine A was: CL (L/h)=2.4649(*)(age/86)((-3.3856)), Ka=0.6750 h(-1), V (L)=104.216. The final PPK model was demonstrated to be suitable and effective by the bootstrap and visual predictive checks. CONCLUSION: A PPK model of huperzine A in elderly Chinese subjects is established, which can be used to predict PPK parameters of huperzine A in the treatment of elderly AD patients.
A series of mono- and per-6-substituted cyclodextrin derivatives were synthesized as synthetic receptors (or host molecules) of rocuronium bromide, the most widely used neuromuscular blocker in anaesthesia. By forming host-guest complexes with rocuronium, these cyclodextrin derivatives reverse the muscle relaxation induced by rocuronium in vitro and in vivo and therefore can be used as reversal agents of the neuromuscular blocker to assist rapid recovery of patients after surgery. Because this supramolecular mechanism of action does not involve direct interaction with the cholinergic system, the reversal by these compounds, e.g., compound 14 (Org 25969), is not accompanied by cardiovascular side effects usually attendant with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors such as neostigmine. The structure-activity relationships are consistent with this supramolecular mechanism of action and are discussed herein. These include the effects of binding cavity size and hydrophobic and electrostatic interaction on the reversal activities of these compounds.
A series benzylpiperidinium and benzylpyridinium quaternary salts have been synthesised and tested for inhibition of acetylcholinesterase and reversal of neuromuscular block induced by vecuronium. Several potent reversal agents have been identified and their haemodynamic effects measured.
        
Title: Oxyaniliniums as acetylcholinesterase inhibitors for the reversal of neuromuscular block Grove SJ, Kaur J, Muir AW, Pow E, Tarver GJ, Zhang MQ Ref: Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Lett, 12:193, 2002 : PubMed
A series of oxyanilinium-based AChE inhibitors have been synthesised and tested for the reversal of vecuronium-induced neuromuscular block Several compounds for example 2-hydroxy and 2-methoxy-N,N-dimethyl-N-allylanilinium bromide 3 and 6 showed comparable reversal potencies to edrophonium and clean in vivo cardiovascular profiles
        
Title: Novel piperidinium and pyridinium agents as water-soluble acetylcholinesterase inhibitors for the reversal of neuromuscular blockade Palin R, Clark JK, Cowley P, Muir AW, Pow E, Prosser AB, Taylor R, Zhang MQ Ref: Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Lett, 12:2569, 2002 : PubMed
A series of piperidinium and pyridinium agents containing a common structural fragment of 5,6-dimethoxybenzothiophene have been synthesised as water-soluble acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. Several compounds, for example 42 (AChE IC(50) 0.03 microM) have been found to reverse the neuromuscular blockade induced by vecuronium bromide in vitro and in vivo. Coupled with their high water solubility (up to 30-60 mg/mL), these compounds are potentially useful as intravenous reversal agents of neuromuscular blocking agents in surgical anaesthesia.
        
Title: Molecular modelling and QSAR of reversible acetylcholines-terase inhibitors Kaur J, Zhang MQ Ref: Curr Med Chem, 7:273, 2000 : PubMed
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitors are an important class of medicinal agents useful for the treatment of Alzheimer s disease, glaucoma, myasthenia gravis and for the recovery of neuromuscular block in surgery. To rationalize the structural requirements of AChE inhibitors we attempt to derive a coherent AChE-inhibitor recognition pattern based on literature data of molecular modelling and quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) analyses. These data are summarised from nearly all therapeutically important chemical classes of reversible AChE inhibitors, e.g., derivatives of physostigmine, tacrine, donepezil and huperzine A. Interactions observed from X-ray crystallography between these inhibitors and AChE have also been incorporated and compared with modelling and QSAR results. It is concluded that hydrophobicity and the presence of an ionizable nitrogen are the pre-requisites for the inhibitors to interact with AChE. However the mode of interaction i.e., the 3-dimensional (3D) positioning of the inhibitor in the active site of the enzyme varies among different chemical classes. It is also recognised that water molecules play crucial roles in defining these different 3D positioning. The information on AChE-inhibitor interactions provided should be useful for future discovery of new chemical classes of AChE inhibitors, especially from De Novo design and hybrid construction.
A genomic 38 kbp segment on the c1750 cosmid clone containing the cdc2 gene, located in the left arm of chromosome II from Schizosaccharomyces pombe, was sequenced. The segment was found to have five previously known genes, pht1, cdc2, his3, act1 and mei4. Among 11 coding sequences (CDSs) predicted by the gene finding software INTRON.PLOT., four CDSs, pi007, pi010, pi014 and pi016, had considerable similarity to 40S ribosomal protein, glycosyltransferase, cdc2-related protein kinase and alpha-1, 2-mannosyltransferase, respectively. Another unusually huge open reading frame (ORF) (pi011), consisting of 2233 amino acids, existed, having significant homology to alpha-amylase, granule-bound glycogen synthase and the Sz. pombe YS 1110 clone product at the N-terminal, middle and C-terminal regions, respectively. All the predicted 11 CDSs were experimentally analysed by RACE PCR. The sequencing of the RACE products revealed that there were two small overlaps at the 3' untranslated regions (UTRs) between pi004 and pi005 (17 bp) and between pi007 and pi008 (2 bp). The distances between 5' end of the 5'UTR and the putative translation initiation codon varied from 10 to 302 nucleotides (nt) among the nine CDSs successfully analysed by 5'-RACE. The expression level of each CDS on this clone was determined. Among the 16 genes on this clone, the previously determined genes, pht1, cdc2, his3 and act1, were found to be most highly expressed. Finally, cDNAs of all the newly identified genes were detected by RACE, proving the actual expression of these genes. The nucleotide sequence has been submitted to the EMBL database under Accession No. AB004534.