Bovine splenic nerve was used as a source of axolemmaenriched fractions derived from mammalian unmyelinated axons. By electron microscopy, splenic nerve consisted entirely of fascicles of unmyelinated axons and associated Schwann cells. The epineurium and blood vessels were stripped from the dissect
Properties of acetylcholinesterase in axolemma-enriched fractions isolated from bovine splenic nerve
β Scribed by H. H. Hannesson; Dr. G. H. DeVries
- Book ID
- 102385422
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 463 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-4012
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β¦ Synopsis
The properties of acetylcholinesterase ( AChE) in axolemma-enriched fractions (AEF) from bovine splenic nerve were investigated to see if they differed in any way from those of the AChE in diaphragm muscle. The axolemmal enzyme had a low Km for acetylthiocholine (ca. 90 pM), exhibited substrate inhibition, and had a well-defined optimum of substrate concentration of ImM. The rate of hydrolysis of substrate decreased with increasing acyl chain length (acetyl->propionyl-> butyryl-). The AChE inhibitors eserine and hexamethonium were competitive inhibitors of the membrane-bound enzyme, whereas lidocaine was a noncompetitive inhibitor; these results were comparable to the effect of these inhibitors on diaphragm muscle AChE. The axolemmal enzyme was more efficiently solubilized and more stable in nonionic detergents such as Triton X-100 and Tween 20 than charged detergents such as lysolecithin and zwitterionic detergents. These results indicate that the AChE present in bovine splenic nerve AEF is identical to the previously characterized AChE from other sources.
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