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Elsevier, Journal of Chromatography A, 13(1216), p. 2730-2738

DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2008.09.100

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Immobilized butyrylcholinesterase in the characterization of new inhibitors that could ease Alzheimer's disease

Journal article published in 2008 by Manuela Bartolini ORCID, Nigel H. Greig, Qian-Sheng Yu, Vincenza Andrisano
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Focus of this work was the development and characterization of a new immobilized enzyme reactor (IMER) containing human recombinant butyrylcholinesterase (rBChE) for the on-line kinetic characterization of specific, pseudo-irreversible and brain-targeted BChE inhibitors as potential drug candidates for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Specifically, a rBChE-IMER containing 0.99 U of covalently bound target enzyme was purposely developed and inserted into a HPLC system connected to a UV-vis detector. Selected reversible cholinesterase inhibitors, (-)-phenserine and (-)-cymserine analogues, were then kinetically characterized by rBChE-IMER, and by classical in solution assays and their carbamoylation and decarbamoylation constants were determined. The results support the elucidation of the potency, inhibition duration, mode of action and specific structure/activity relations of these agents and allow cross-validation of the two assay techniques.